The World of Hospitality Issue 21 2017 | Page 36

36 the World Of Hospitality Lalit London Lalit London – Indian opulence meets Victorian grandeur Former grammar school becomes London’s first luxury boutique Indian hotel. Opening in January 2017 and situated on the South Bank in the Tower Bridge Conservation Area, the Lalit London occupies the former home of renowned London grammar school St Olave’s. An impressive example of its type, the building was built in two phases between 1894 and 1896, and was the grand design of Edward Mountford, the eminent Victorian architect behind such iconic buildings as the Old Bailey and Sheffield Town Hall, and an initiator of the Renaissance style of the 1890s. It housed St Olave’s until 1968 when the school relocated to its present home in Orpington. In 1972 it received Grade II listed status, and after briefly being used by Lambeth College, it lay empty for some fifteen years. During this time it was acquired by Berkeley Homes as part of a broader scheme, and achieved planning permission to be converted into a hotel. Hence this property is very special for us.’ The Lalit Suri Hospitality Group meanwhile had been looking for a London site for their first hotel EPR Architects, working alongside Archer Humphryes as interior designers, was tasked with fulfilling the family’s vision of creating a 70-bedroom luxury boutique hotel redolent of Indian opulence, combined with the charm of an old-fashioned English school. The building was, however, by this point in serious venture outside the Indian subcontinent. The group acquired the building at an auction for £14.7m in 2012 and embarked on an inspirational legacy project. Commenting at the time, his wife, Dr Jyotsna Suri, Chairperson & Managing Director, said: ‘Mr. Lalit Suri yearned for a hotel in London a city he loved so intensely that it became his final resting place in 2006. disrepair, and likely heading towards a state of collapse. An ambitious and sensitive restoration programme, including a new slate roof, was therefore initiated with brickwork, rotten timbers and cracked panels all painstakingly replaced to restore the building to its former splendour. The original plaster cornices and dado mouldings were also refurbished, as were all