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CAPITAL SAVINGS: STAYING IN LONDON FOR LESS
London
is one of the world’s most exciting cities –
but is it possible to find reasonably priced accommodation
there? Once you start delving you soon find that there
are all sorts of good-value options, including bed and
breakfasts, budget hotels, apartments, hostels and university
residences, often with a lot more character than their
more expensive hotel counterparts.
What
could be more elegant than the house, in fashionable
Knightsbridge, where writer Virginia Woolf was born
in 1882 and spent her childhood? Situated in a quiet
close, once also home to statesman Sir Winston Churchill,
a stay costs £75 in a room for two, including
a full breakfast served in the sitting room. It is one
of dozens of bed and breakfast properties on the books
of b&b agency At Home In London, itself one of several
such agencies offering an en-suite room for two or more
guests in private homes for less than £95 per
night with breakfast. Depending on location and type
of accommodation, the agencies’ prices start as
low as £19 per person.
B&b
is a particularly British way of enjoying good, comfortable
accommodation with a home-from-home feeling. Many visitors
are surprised to discover such a wide range on offer
in a bustling city like London: agencies such as Bed
& Breakfast GB, London Homestead Services, Host
& Guest, Uptown Reservations and Welcome Homes have
portfolios of accommodation in small guest-houses or
with families, some centrally-located, some in accessible
suburbs, all offering a warm welcome to visitors. With
B&B GB, under-7s go free.
Self-catering
apartments are ideal for those on a budget and West
London’s Clarendon House Apartments, about 30
minutes by Underground from Piccadilly Circus, has fully-equipped
flats available from around £250 per week. Westminster
University Halls of Residence offer self-catering summer
stays in central locations such as Victoria, Waterloo
and the City (plus charming Highgate – one of
London’s ‘villages’ near Hampstead
Heath) – at prices from £21.
As
in any big city, accommodation is less expensive if
you are prepared to travel to reach the centre. Hotels
are springing up in Docklands, near Canary Wharf, with
its waterside restaurants, concert-hall and shopping,
at amazingly good-value prices. Here and in other easy
to reach locations such as Greenwich and Kew (some are
in central London, too) are hotel chains such as Formule
1, Etap, Ibis - all part of the Accor Hotel group; Travel
Inn, Travelodge and Holiday Inn Express ––
with en-suite rooms sleeping up to four at between £27.50
and £83 per night. Breakfast may not be served
in the traditional way: it could be in the café
next door or from the bar, but for the budget-conscious
these hotels offer a superb deal.
Younger
– and young-in-heart – travellers may find
one of London’s newest hotels is ideal for them.
The Piccadilly Hotel, beside Piccadilly Circus, is a
backpackers’ dream, with dormitory beds available
at £12 per night, including breakfast and linen.
There are twin and family rooms, too; a lounge with
100-channel TV and an internet suite. Fresh, smart and
sunny, this hostel opened in early 2003 and already
promises to be as popular as the longer established
St. Christopher’s Inns group with its flagship
hostel on the South Bank, or The Generator. Bookable
online with beds from £10 (£23 for a twin
room) and cooking facilities available as well as a
café providing hot meals, The Generator is near
the British Museum and is definitely a fun place to
stay - its bar offering nightly entertainment .
The
smaller hotel groups, such as Fullers Hotels (rooms
available at weekends for £85) with their excellent
pub-restaurants attached, bring a flavour of old London
to their guests. They include the Chamberlain near Tower
Bridge and the Sanctuary House near Westminster Abbey,
with its ale-and-pie house on the ground floor.
London
has many small hotels, generally clustering around main
rail termini such as Victoria or King’s Cross,
or in Bloomsbury and cosmopolitan Earl’s Court.
Some are family-run, most fully accredited to the London
Tourist Board (do check before booking) and so of good
standard. In Hammersmith, just 15 minutes by Underground
from Piccadilly Circus, are two excellent establishments.
The Brook Hotel has a bar and sitting room for guests
opening on to the garden and costs £85 for an
en-suite double/twin including full English breakfast.
The St. Peter’s Hotel not far from Shepherd’s
Bush and just 20 minutes from the centre, is justly
popular with aircrew on stop-over because of its delicious
English breakfasts and its friendly and high-quality
service. An en-suite double/twin costs £75 per
night including breakfast.
Last
but not least, those seeking value-for-money can live
like a lord. One of b&b agency Uptown Reservations’
hosts opens his elegant home to guests at £95
per room - and is indeed a Lord!
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