Park Hyatt London River Thames
Daily price line
Upcoming nightly rates
Review
Character and identity
The first Park Hyatt in the UK plants its flag in Nine Elms, the fast-developing riverside quarter near Battersea Power Station, in an 18-storey KPF-designed glass tower. Inside, Super Potato's interiors blend contemporary English style with East-meets-West accents, anchored by Charlie Whinney's sculptural Ebb and Flow installation in the lobby. Across 203 rooms and 34 suites, expect floor-to-ceiling windows, marble bathrooms and warm tones lifted by leather and brass. Dining runs from Nine Elms Kitchen & Terrace to the Cantonese Yú Gé and TAMISé Tea Lounge & Wine Library, with a wellness floor housing a 65-foot pool, six treatment rooms and Somadome meditation pods.
Who's it for
Best for:
Design-literate couples and business travellers who want river views, a serious spa floor, and a quieter, residential pocket of London rather than the West End scrum. Families are well looked after too, with 42 connecting rooms and generous Ambassador and Presidential Suites built for longer stays or multigenerational groups.
Should look elsewhere:
Anyone wanting to step out of the lobby into Mayfair, Soho or Covent Garden. Nine Elms is still emerging, so guests who measure a London stay by walkable theatres, galleries and historic streetscape will find themselves reliant on taxis and the Tube.
Bottom line
What sets this address apart is the combination of a proper wellness floor, river-facing rooms and a residential-feeling new-build, rather than a central postcode. Book here if you want calm, space and a long pool over location convenience. The Ambassador Suites are the sweet spot for the view; the Presidential, with its river-facing freestanding tub and private lift, is the splurge.