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Connecting hoteliers through shared knowledge

Stay ahead of the hospitality curve at the Hotel Owner Conference 2026. Our 2026 sessions will tackle the industry's most pressing challenges: Hospitality Investment & Debt, the impact of AI and Personalisation, the roadmap to Net Zero, and Storytelling through Design. Meet the leaders defining the next era of UK hotel ownership.
Julie WhiteCCO, Accor Europe
Suzanne SpeakMD UK&I, Radisson
David HartCEO, RBH Hospitality
Varun ShettyGM, The Belfry
Christian MastersHotel Manager, art'otel
Julie WhiteCCO, Accor Europe
Suzanne SpeakMD UK&I, Radisson
David HartCEO, RBH Hospitality
Varun ShettyGM, The Belfry
Christian MastersHotel Manager, art'otel
3 November 2026  •  Prince Philip House, London
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Plans for London’s ‘first underground hotel’ rejected

Plans for London’s ‘first underground hotel’ rejected

In this episode we speak to Anthony Hunt, partner and co-head of Corporate Real Estate at law firm Howard Kennedy. We discuss why 2026 may be seen as a pivotal year for boutique hotels, unpack the rise of global nomadism and how this is shaping demand and trends across hospitality, and how a strong team and clear, consistent messaging and offerings are key to securing investment.

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Plans for a development dubbed London’s ‘first underground hotel’ have been rejected by the local council.

Criterion Capital applied to convert a below-ground NCP car park on great Russell Street in Bloomsbury into a 166-bedroom property, which it hoped to name The LDN hotel.

The hotel was intended to be a Japanese-style ‘pod’ hotel that would provide budget accommodation for tourists and business travellers. The planning application claimed it would fill a gap in the market for “simple, essential service with eco-friendly hotel accommodation”.

The property, which would have only been bookable for a maximum of three nights, would have been artificially lit and did not include plans for a restaurant and bar.

However, the Evening Standard has reported that councillors have rejected the plans, warning it would be a “minus-five star” hotel.

Speaking about the decision, councillor Stephen Stark said: “With no windows in the rooms, it’s not a zero-star rating for the hotel but probably minus five stars.”

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