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Wednesday, October 30, 2024

Hotel Café Royal opens new lobby designed by Piero Lissoni

Hotel Café Royal, London’s modern grand hotel, has proudly unveiled its new lobby and guest arrival experience, designed by world-renowned architect and interior designer Piero Lissoni.

 

Hotel Café Royal
The lobby at Hotel Café Royal has been designed by Piero Lissoni www.lissoniassociati.com/en

Designed and overseen by Lissoni, and created with a total investment of almost £5m, the large lobby delivers an outstanding and glamorous entrance to the hotel.

 

Inspired by the lobbies of the world’s Palace hotels, the new reception space at Hotel Café Royal is double height and one of the largest in London. With the new restaurant above, also designed by Lissoni, this new grand space fully completes the offering at the hotel, now open for five years.

 

Hotel Café Royal

 

Lissoni’s previous global projects are varied and extend to yachts, residential properties and luxury hotels including the Conservatorium in Amsterdam, also owned by The Set hotels. In addition to his architectural work, Lissoni is also lauded for his extensive work in furniture design, having worked for companies such as  Boffi, Cassina, B&B Italia and Flos.

 

Working closely with the hotel team, Lissoni has transformed the main entrance to the hotel on Air Street.  The transformation of this historical space, part of the original Café Royal built in 1926 is a sensitive yet striking one, a hallmark of Lissoni’s work.

 

Hotel Café Royal

 

The minimalist yet opulent lobby is characterised by a sense of space and contemporary glamour that marries the building’s guilded past with its patrons’ contemporary lifestyles.

 

 

As visitors arrive through the double height revolving door they are first greeted by a view of the bespoke Murano glass chandelier that dominates the room. Designed by a fabled Italian firm Vistosi, the chandelier weighs over 350 kilograms and is situated above a table at the centre of the room designed by Lissoni himself displaying flowers by Hotel Café Royal’s in-house florist Jamie Aston.

 

Hotel Café Royal

 

The back of the room holds the reception and guest relations desks flanked on each side by large bookshelves containing a library of books produced and curated by Maison Assouline. To complete the lobby, waiting areas with furniture pieces designed by Paolo Castelli and by legendary Italian makers Poltrona Frau, Cassina and Living Divani are available to guests and visitors alike. Of the lighting in the room, Lissoni described the effect he wanted to achieve as ‘sexy and sensual, the poetic contrast against the darkness’ of the traditionally listed room. Manufacterers used to light the space include Architectural FX (using their sustainable LED system), Atrium Flos and John Cullen.

 

 

Above this new lobby space Lissoni’s work continues into the 110 cover restaurant. A personal passion for food and kitchen design has led the architect to work with a number of chefs and now the internationally-renowned Laurent Tourondel who will shortly open the new restaurant at Hotel Café Royal. The restaurant will offer relaxed yet refined all-day dining and will build upon the history of the famous Grill Room restaurant, established on the site in 1865. A new grill concept in line with contemporary lifestyles has been created, with the restaurant featuring an open kitchen serving fresh vegetables, fish and meat from the grill. In addition there will be an exceptional sushi offering to complete the experience. Booth seating and lighting by Lissoni will create an informal but sophisticated atmosphere with the products and pieces used throughout the spaces handpicked by Lissoni.

 

Hotel Café Royal

Lissoni said of the project, “I wanted to respect and convey the true ‘feeling’ of London by combining the contemporary life and taste of the city’s inhabitants with its inheritant elegance and tradition. “ On working with The Set hotels in the collaborative efforts to create and complete the project he stated “on this project the word ‘impossible’ was forbidden to use”.

 

www.lissoniassociati.com/en

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