Say Hello to Londons Restored Landmark, the St. Pancras Renaissance London Hotel

St. Pancras Renaissance London HotelWith the Royal Wedding fast approaching and the Olympic Games drumming up excitement for 2012, London has become the destination du jour with no shortage of stylish places to stay! In recent months, a slew of new hotels have opened on the famously fashionable hotel scene. One of the most highly anticipated is the St. Pancras Renaissance London Hotel, reopened after a dramatic 150 million transformation. With the arrival of Eurostar trains in 2007, the St. Pancras railway station was itself renovated, and now it has a hotel to match. The red brick building a stunning example of High Victorian Gothic architecture was saved from demolition and has been restored to its former glory as one of the citys great landmarks. The five-star St. Pancras Renaissance London has 204 rooms and 41 suites.

To quote the London Evening Standard:

it is the restored public spaces that will astonish visitors: the grand sweeping staircase, the Ladies Smoking Room - the first place in Europe where women could smoke in public - and the old ticket office that has been converted into a bar. A St Pancras ale is being brewe! d in tri bute to the stations history as a transportation point for millions of barrels of beer. The hotel reception and function room have been carved from the former taxi rank, and Michelin-starred chef Marcus Wareing will open a restaurant and bar serving classic British cooking and named after the stations master architect, Sir George Gilbert Scott.


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