The World of Hospitality Issue 21 2017 | Page 38

the windows and doors, with non-original windows being replaced with new ones in order to reinstate Mountford’s original design. EPR, Archer Humphryes and Dr Suri established a close working relationship to create a bespoke boutique hotel, encapsulating both the educational heritage of the building, and an authentic Indian experience with the luxury of high-end modern design. The names of the public spaces has reference to their school setting, thus the old Governors’ office, with its LED-lit panelled walls and intricate plaster ceiling, becomes ‘The Headmaster’s Room’, the meeting rooms are ‘Laboratories’, and the old clerk’s office, with its striking purple mirrored glass features, is reincarnated as ‘The Teachers’ Room’ and the rooms are classified as Classrooms. use of Indian stone sculptures and topiary details on the exterior, to the fretwork screen with its traditional Indian Jali pattern in the reception area, deployment of tapestries, motifs, and patterned joinery work and the magnificent blue chandeliers in the Great Hall. Each of the suites and bedrooms (the ‘classrooms’ and ‘cosy rooms’) is unique, with those on the top floor enjoying 30-foot high ceilings. Of particular note are the Mountford Suite, named in honour of the original architect, and the Lalit Legacy Suite which occupies what was formerly the headmaster’s office. In order to achieve a bedroom count of 70, EPR designed an additional storey by inserting a floor into the double- height classroom spaces. Further development work was carried out through the excavation of a new basement area to house ‘Rejuve’, the hotel’s state-of- the-art spa, gymnasium, changing areas and treatment rooms offering Indian therapies. Indian design finds its place throughout, from the Website: www.thelalit.com The jewel in the hotel’s crown is ‘Baluchi’, the award winning pan-Indian restaurant located in the stunning triple-high barrel-vaulted Great Hall, with gallery, original parquet flooring, and timber panelled walls, set off by genuine Indian chandeliers, suspended from a royal-blue ceiling. The Naanery, a bread bar, whose panelling repeats the Jali pattern showcased in the reception areas, and show kitchen with tandoor oven, and the spacious Terrace completes the dramatic transformation from school dining hall to London’s finest signature destination restaurant. The Lalit London was launched on 19 November 2016—to coincide with what would have been founder chairman Lalit Suri’s 70th birthday—and opens its doors to the public in January 2017, guaranteeing London a remarkable and truly memorable Indian experience.