You’d be hard-pressed to find a better location for a hotel than that enjoyed by the Lanesborough. Strategically placed in the heart of London, the former home of Viscount Lanesborough overlooks the beautiful Hyde Park to the front and Wellington Arch to the side, as it opens into Green Park and, further along, to Buckingham Palace.
In July 2015, the Georgian property reopened as part of the Oetker Collection. It had undergone an extensive renovation, for which interior design studio Alberto Pinto was tasked with returning the hotel and its 93 guest rooms to a Regency-inspired style. Now, the hotel marks the opening of an 18,000sq ft (1,672sq m) wellness centre, designed as an exclusive private members’ fitness and health club.
The Lanesborough Club & Spa is geared towards both hotel guests and members who are juggling high-pressure, busy lives, providing them guidance on wellbeing and lifestyle. For London locals, this personalisation and exclusivity doesn’t come cheap. Memberships are limited to 400 in order to keep things at the right level of personalisation – the club includes spa butlers who launder members’ gym kits, among other things – and annual charges range from £4,000 to £6,000 (US$4,954 to US$7,431, €4,606 to €6,909).
“You’d never expect a club like this in a hotel,” says Philippe Perd, chief operating officer for Oetker Collection. “There’s been a clear strategy right from the beginning to make it what it is today.”
Classic aesthetic
Set in an adjacent building to the hotel, the spa features an entrance from the hotel as well as a private members’ entrance. Designers 1508 London have accentuated the tone of Alberto Pinto’s work, while simultaneously creating new design details exclusive to the spa, taking inspiration from the ceremonial spaces and private areas associated with the ancient Roman Baths in Bath.
Interiors feature British styling combined with classical details, such as silk wallpapers, oil paintings in gilt frames, dark wooden panelling and leather upholstery. Peacock blue satins, deep green silks and bronze trims work to complement classic elements and materials such as oak, marble and stone.
“In designing the spa, we really wanted to create a beautiful extension of The Lanesborough Hotel,” says Louise Wicksteed, creative director and partner at 1508 London. “It’s such an iconic British hotel, and it has such an amazing quality to it. It’s an extension of your personal space, and it feels very personal, so that’s what we tried to bring into the spa design. The ‘language’ is taken from The Lanesborough itself – the Portland stone, the timbers and the panelling – it’s very rich and layered and detailed.”
The separate male and female wet areas include steam experiences, saunas and experience showers. A snug private bar on the male side is designed to be a sit-down private getaway and has a ‘rare’ theme, with rare books and a collection of rare butterflies, while a shared hydropool features a dramatic cascading waterfall edge and is designed to encourage quiet contemplation and relaxation. There is also a shared relaxation space, a social area with a restaurant and semi-private dining area, and a manicure and pedicure suite.
The female changing area features a story about the Lanesborough flower, with hand-worked floor mosaics and a hand-painted glass lighting fixture, both featuring flower motifs. “We wanted each room to have its own story,” says Perd. “It’s all about the journey of discovery.”
Partnering with purpose
Spa consultant Neil Howard worked on the project, bringing in lifestyle brand Bodyism for the fitness portion, ‘super-therapist’ and facial expert Anastasia Achilleos and massage trainer Beata Aleksandrowicz of Pure Massage. Skincare partners include La Prairie and ila, with saunas by Corso and custom massage tables from Gharieni. Ila has created a bespoke product range exclusively for The Lanesborough, including a balm and a facial serum, as well as a signature therapy, Kundalini Stillness, which is a back treatment for exhaustion, stress and chronic fatigue that uses ancient marma therapy and warm herbal poultices, along with sound healing and chakra balancing.
Achilleos brings her cranio sacral expertise and facial massage and will be available in a once-a-week residency for one-on-one sessions, priced at £475 (US$610, €560) for 90 minutes. “We’re in the business of creating transformation – whether it’s in the way we touch you or the smells we create,” says Achilleos. “This place is about world-class treatments, and about closing the gap between the five-star hotel and the five-star spa.”
Aleksandrowicz has trained therapists in her signature 12-principle method, designed to protect them from injury and burnout. The method incorporates details such as working in bare feet – “It supports your lower back and grounds you energetically,” Aleksandrowicz says – and using low tables that enable therapists to bend their knees as they work. She has also created Body Movement by Pure Massage, a treatment exclusive to The Lanesborough which fuses a range of massage styles, and is given with clothes on. It starts with 10 minutes of gentle rocking to calm the body and loosen the joints and ligaments, then moves into stretches designed to energise and relax.
Holistic fitness
Lifestyle brand Bodyism has curated the fitness space, with Technogym equipment such as the Ultraslide, Skillmill – a curved, more naturally positioned treadmill – and the adaptable Kinesis, all helping to create the holistic exercise environment.
“Instead of counting reps and steps, you’re having fun, and you can be present and be in the moment,” says Bodyism founder James Duigan (see SB17/1 p88). “The new frontier in wellness is the mind. The psychological energy you put in to your movement affects you on a molecular level and cellular level.”
The approach extends beyond the fitness space. Duigan and Aleksandrowicz are bridging the gap between spa and fitness for a more personal experience, where therapists are communicating with trainers.
“It’s just breathtaking in the ambition and the scope of what we want to create for people,” says Duigan. “It’s like nothing else, and no expense has been spared.”