The Bulgari Hotel London opened in 2012 and introduced a design vocabulary to Knightsbridge that London's hotel landscape had not previously accommodated: pure Italian modernism, applied without compromise to a city that tends to default to heritage. The architects, Antonio Citterio and Patricia Viel, used dark palettes — black lacquer, Italian gold marble, Macassar ebony — in a way that resists the formlessness of most contemporary hotel design. The building is narrow and deep, running from Knightsbridge south through what was formerly a residential mews; the 85 rooms are distributed across this footprint in configurations that feel more like well-proportioned apartments than hotel rooms.
The rooms begin at a size that most Knightsbridge competitors reserve for suites. The standard Deluxe Room — 50 square metres — is furnished with Citterio's own Maxalto furniture, Italian linen, and a bathroom of Italian marble in a configuration that occupies more floor area than the bedroom. The suites extend this logic: the London Suite, on the upper floors, has a private terrace with views south over the mews to Hyde Park, and a living room designed as an exercise in Italian residential restraint. The hotel's small size — 85 rooms — means that every guest is handled by a staff-to-guest ratio that the larger Knightsbridge properties cannot replicate.
The Bulgari Restaurant serves contemporary Italian cuisine — not the version with red-checked tablecloths, but the version that has a Piedmontese sommelier and a kitchen that takes pasta as seriously as the rest of the menu. The Il Bar, the hotel's lounge and bar, operates in the Italian hotel tradition: excellent coffee in the mornings, aperitivo in the late afternoon, cocktails by bartenders who have studied the Milan bar programme with evident care. Room service operates on the principle that an 85-room hotel can offer everything the restaurant menu contains, prepared to the same standard, at any hour.
The Bulgari Spa is the hotel's defining argument. The 25-metre swimming pool — 25 metres in a Knightsbridge hotel is an extraordinary provision — is accompanied by a thermal suite, eleven treatment rooms, and a beauty programme that draws on BVLGARI's own cosmetics line. The spa's length: pool alone justifies a hotel stay in the way that few individual features manage. Guests who book primarily to swim in a serious pool in central London arrive at the correct conclusion.
An anniversary at the Bulgari operates on Italian design principles: everything is intentional, nothing is approximate, and the proportions are correct. The restaurant has the right relationship between intimacy and formality for a significant celebration. The spa has the right relationship between effort and indulgence for the following morning. The rooms are large enough to feel like a gift in themselves. The hotel is small enough that the staff will remember your name by the second evening, which is the kind of detail that distinguishes an anniversary from a business trip.
The 25-metre pool alone makes the Bulgari Hotel the most defensible wellness destination in Knightsbridge. Combined with the thermal suite, the BVLGARI spa treatments, and the Italian restaurant that takes nutrition as seriously as indulgence, a two- or three-day wellness stay here runs to a programme that most London hotels need specialist facilities to replicate. The Hyde Park entry is five minutes on foot; a morning in the park followed by an afternoon in the spa is a day well spent.
Rates from £900/night. Check availability at Bulgari Hotel London.
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