Leading London developer Galliard Group has completed the 3.5-year construction of the new Great Scotland Yard Hotel, once the location of the original Scotland Yard Metropolitan Police HQ, later offices for the Ministry of Defence and now a magnificent new 93,000 sqft 5-star hotel, to be owned by Lulu Group International and operated by Hyatt.
In 2013 Galliard Group acquired a 125-year Crown Estate lease on the building which was exchanged for a forward sale of the hotel when completed to Abu Dhabi based LuLu Group International in 2016 for £110m. Galliard’s construction division has now completed the £75m construction project to deliver the new hotel, working with world-renowned hospitality design firm Hirsch Bedner Associates.
One of the finest 5-star hotels ever built in London, set to launch later in 2019, the new £110m seven-storey hotel at 1-5 Great Scotland Yard provides 153 bedrooms and suites; the 11 suites including a spectacular townhouse suite created from part of the original Scotland Yard Police premises.
Hotel features include interior design references to the building’s police and military past through the use of shields, emblems and historic details etched into glass and metalwork. The hotel has a double height vestibule, grand entrance lounge, concierge, main cocktail bar, palm court style lounge, whiskey bar/clubroom, signature restaurant, library, gymnasium, 120-seater main conference room/ballroom, meeting rooms and function/private dining rooms.
Over the last 10-years Galliard Group has built 10 hotels providing 2,061 bedrooms and suites and a range of hospitality and leisure amenities. Working with a range of clients, past hotel projects include new build and refurbishment schemes including the 5-star St James’s Club & Hotel, Staycity Hotels, Premier Inn, 4-star Park Plaza Hotels and the Grade II-Listed Jacobean Harte & Garter Hotel and Spa.
To deliver the Great Scotland Yard Hotel the construction division of Galliard Group, led by CEO Don O’Sullivan and MD Robin Hawkins, project managed a team including Head of Galliard Design Lesley Lawson and Galliard construction director Darren Maguire, working alongside professional consultants and an international team on site of up to 200 people, from 18 different countries. Galliard was responsible for construction and build, shell and core design, fit out, specification procurement, logistics and M&E. Delivery required Galliard to liaise with a range of stakeholders including Westminster Council, The Crown Estate, TFL, BT, MOLA and Westminster Highways.
The site and buildings at 1-5 Great Scotland Yard have a fascinating history. In Tudor times the location served as an Embassy-style dwelling for the Kings of Scotland when they visited King Henry VIII and Queen Elizabeth I at neighbouring Whitehall Palace: hence the name Great Scotland Yard (meaning: the place of the Scottish Lords).
In 1812 three Georgian townhouses were built at 1-3 Great Scotland Yard, with a yard to the front and gardens occupying the rest of the site. In 1829, Home Secretary Sir Robert Peel selected Great Scotland Yard as the headquarters of the newly founded Metropolitan Police force. The building’s main entrance was at 4 Whitehall Place, but in 1867 a public office was created to the rear, occupying the three townhouses in Great Scotland Yard, giving the headquarters its famous name.
It was here that the famous Plaistow Marshes (1864) and Jack the Ripper (1888) crimes were investigated and Scotland Yard was made famous by novelists including Charles Dickens and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. In June 1891 the police headquarters moved to a new location, which was named New Scotland Yard.
In 1901 the townhouse at 1 Great Scotland Yard was leased to the armed forces and this saved it from demolition in 1910 when the other townhouses and adjacent gardens were replaced by the current Edwardian building at 3-5 Great Scotland Yard which served as the British Army Recruitment Office and Royal Military Police headquarters. It was from this HQ that Lord Kitchener famously told WWI recruits “Your Country Needs You” and there were cells in the basement for Army deserters. In 1982 a refurbishment introduced a new atrium and the building later became the Ministry of Defence Library until 2004.
Galliard Group has now converted the Grade II listed Georgian townhouse and grand Edwardian building into one of London’s finest hotels. The elegant facades have been restored, behind which luxurious interiors with a bespoke specification provide exquisite private and public entertaining spaces which pay tribute to the rich history of Great Scotland Yard, alongside hotel rooms and suites of exceptional quality.
To deliver the outstanding specification Galliard has sourced over 200 different custom-made materials, fixtures and fittings from locations including Italy, Vietnam, China, Japan and Turkey using the finest finishes including different marbles, stone, crystal, wood and leathers. Artisans from six different countries were sourced to create many of the hand-crafted special finishes including wall paneling, bespoke flooring and ceiling moldings.
Originally five storeys in height, the main Edwardian building has a grand Imperial Red brick and Portland stone façade with arched main entrance, ornate pediment and tall windows with feature brick and stone detailing. Galliard has extended the building, adding two new levels of basement and two new floors above the original roof level including a top storey with a period-style Westmorland slate clad mansard roof, with handmade slate, and ecological features. Digging to a depth of 9 metres (30 ft), the basement excavation is one of the largest and most complex undertaken in Whitehall in the last decade.
Galliard has repaired, cleaned and restored the Edwardian façade, adding an Edwardian style feature clock, Gas-style copper lanterns and plant boxes. Behind the retained façade Galliard built a concrete frame to support the new hotel and have created brand new interiors over nine levels.
Double doors at the hotel entrance lead into a vestibule with an 8 metre (26 ft) high ceiling and feature chandelier by Precioisa, which opens onto the main reception foyer which has Italian Crema marble flooring in a bespoke marquetry design created from different coloured marbles and custom-design plasterwork ceiling with cornices and ceiling roses created by artisans. In keeping with the building’s heritage, the walls are lined in walnut paneling, antique bronze mirrorwork and bespoke joinery.
Secret doors give access to the whiskey bar and signature restaurant. Off the main foyer is the concierge room which has antiqued mirrored walls and a coffered ceiling bordered by bespoke mirrorwork.
The main cocktail bar has a spectacular glass feature dome and bespoke crystal glass sculpture/chandelier, created by Lasvit, the Bohemian lighting specialist. Above the glass dome is a landscaped atrium, designed by Anne French Associates, which rises through the centre of the hotel. The cocktail bar has marble marquetry design flooring, a bespoke bar crafted from custom-design metalwork with cabinetry for drinks and glasses, whilst built into the walls are banquette seating lined in button-cushion leather.
Located behind faux book doors in the main foyer, the whiskey bar/clubroom has timber marquetry flooring crafted by artisans from Italy, timber panelled walls and plasterwork ceiling. The bar is created from natural three trunks and the room is complete with bespoke display cases for whiskey and other drinks. Another lounge is designed in the style of a Victorian palm court with Indian inspired wallcovering and ironmongery, complete with feature fireplace and ceiling designs.
The design of the signature restaurant is inspired by industrial warehouse architecture with Oak timber flooring, ceramic wall tiling, exposed brick walls and coffered vaulted ceilings.
The public bathrooms have chequered black and white flooring, created from ebony and white statuary marble, ceramic wall tiles, Edwardian style plumbing/WC, mirror glass ceiling and bespoke design chinoiserie wallpaper.
On the lower ground floor and basement one of the cells, where legend has it Rudolf Hess was interrogated in 1941, have been replaced by a gymnasium with changing rooms, meeting/conference rooms, a 120 seater conference space and ballroom and a series of VIP function rooms. The function spaces have been designed to replicate the interiors of a grand London townhouse with bespoke Oak parquet flooring, chevron patterned ceiling, marble fireplace, kitchen/serving area with Union Jack Smeg fridges and library area with bespoke joinery. Basement two contains back of house facilities including plant, kitchens, staff offices and leisure area.
The lift lobbies give access to three passenger lifts, the lift cars inspired by grand Edwardian hotels with Calacatta marble flooring, mirrored ceiling and timber and mirrored marquetry sides.
With concept designs from Hirsch Bedner Associates, two hotel bedrooms were initially mocked-up on site by Galliard, allowing for the creation of beautifully designed and finished bedrooms and suites on the upper floors of the hotel. The hotel bedrooms have ornate coffered ceilings, bespoke fitted wardrobes, mini-bar units and mirrorwork; and luxurious bathrooms with marble flooring, walk-in showers and bespoke vanity units. The suites have an antre room, living area, bedroom suite with feature stone fireplace and VIP bathrooms, with selected suites benefitting from private terraces offering views onto Nelson’s Column, Buckingham Palace and Westminster.
The adjoining Grade II listed townhouse at No.1 Great Scotland Yard, once the home of the Metropolitan police, has been incorporated into the main hotel. It has been transformed into a magnificent VIP-suite for visiting business tycoons, celebrities, musicians and heads of state. Arranged over several floors the VIP-suite links into the main hotel but has the benefit of its own private street entrance, opening onto the historic yard which helped give the address its famous name. Like staying in a London townhouse, the VIP-suite benefits from its own family/living room, kitchen, dining room, private study/reception room, wine cellar and two floors of bedrooms.
Stephen Conway, executive chairman of Galliard Group said, “Galliard’s construction division has delivered one of London’s most outstanding 5-star hotels. With its iconic address and famous history, the hotel’s interior design cleverly references the building’s police and military past through the use of shields, emblems and historic details etched into glass and metalwork.”
Don O’Sullivan, chief executive of Galliard Group said, “Over the last decade Galliard has built 10 hotels and the Great Scotland Yard Hotel sets a new benchmark for high quality construction and exquisite design. Our vision was to deliver a world-class hotel of the quality of The Mercer or the Chateau Marmont, a place renowned for exceptional service, destination dining and leisure and outstanding luxury and quality.”
Examples of other Galliard hotel projects include the re-development of the 68 room/suite St James’s Club & Hotel, now one of Mayfair’s finest boutique hotels; the creation of the new 398 bed Park Plaza Hotel at County Hall and the re-development of the Grade II-Listed Jacobean Harte & Garter Hotel and Spa near Windsor Castle.
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