The greater number of cars in the early C20th were requiring a quick expansion of services like petrol stations & garages. The car-related needs of classy Mayfair residents, plus guests of new stores like Selfridges, had to be accommodated for free. So The Beaumont was designed by Fortnum & Mason architects Wimperis and Simpson on behalf of Macy's, as a four-storey parking garage near Oxford St! The 4-storey, neo-classical, column-lined, Portland-stone-like construction, erected in 1925–6 was very elaborate. It featured a properly styled facade in the popular Art Deco style!
The side wings of the building apparently contained facilities for customers and their chauffeurs. The garage changed hands several times, the longest occupant being Dagenham Motors Ltd from c1932 to the 1980s.
Car companies occupied the site until 2009 when it was given Grade II listed status. This was because of its special architectural interest as a distinctive C20th building type, especially the façade. And note another utilitarian structure in this prestigious area as well i.e the listed electricity generating station opposite in Brown Hart Gardens.
The car park lease was sold in 2009 to Grosvenor Estate and in 2014 it opened as The Beaumont, the first hotel by Corbin & King (Ivy, Le Caprice, Delaunay, Wolseley etc). Then the hotel’s freeholder sold its lease to the Barclay brothers (Ritz, Daily Telegraph, Spectator etc), with a for-sale price of between £125-£140 m.
To match the building’s Art-Deco exterior, Jeremy King created a theme that linked all aspects of the hotel’s interior. Grand in style yet welcoming, its design would be inspired by the great Art Deco hotels of the 1920s-30s.
The result is warm-lit public areas of polished walnuts, bronze panthers and black-and-white photographs from the Roaring Twenties. This 5 star hotel has 50 rooms and 23 suites that feature timber headboards, bronze mirroring, mohair-velvet chairs, large desks, silk curtains, geometric carpets and monochrome marble bathrooms. The hotel's website adds the Beaumont is superbly located on a quiet garden square, close to the luxury shops, galleries and museums of Mayfair, St James' and West End.
American Bar
The walls of the timber-panelled American Bar, an important public area of the hotel, are entirely covered by 1930s photos. Behind the bar is the refreshed Colony Grill Room, a masculine American diner. There’s still a retro supper-club vibe, except for the bright new murals and freshly reupholstered blood-red leather banquettes.
Dining room
When listed, the building was described as having an Open-fronted ground floor carried on two columns with stylised capitals; over-sized egg-and-dart frieze above. Above this, the 3 central bays are separated by broad pilasters into 3 single-window bays divided by pilasters with stylised capitals. End bays slightly set-forward, flanked by plain pilasters; each has projecting 2-storey pavilion: that to N has paired round-arched entrances; that to S has single with small window to either side; both have 1st-floor window set in round-headed recessed arch, and ornament to either side. The forecourt between the pavilions always accommodated a filling station.
One of the unique features of the new hotel is the creature that sits squatting on a wing. This is a public architectural sculpture designed in 2014 by Antony Gormley, creator of the Angel of the North. From the outside, it’s a giant crouching cuboid figure on the left of the hotel’s façade (see photos above). Inside, it’s a secluded bedroom with no furniture apart from the linen bed.
Since opening in 2014, the independently owned Beaumont has always relied on the 1920s as a primary source of inspiration. Housed in a smart, pearl-white building from 1926, this sharply dressed, thanks to a recent refurbishment by star architect and designer Thierry Despont, a brand new high-gloss shine, just in time to launch a modern edition of the Roaring Twenties. Known for his impressive portfolio of high-stakes renovation projects like the Ritz Paris, Despont undertook the project alongside London-based architects ReardonSmith, who also count top London properties like The Savoy as clients.
After 17-month closed, in Aug 2021 Beaumont re-opened with a glossy look: a new bar and new lounge that oozed with Roaring 20s decadence. Thierry Despont refreshed the Art Deco lobby of the Beaumont with jazz-age Pierre Frey curtains. The exquisite lobby is the hotel’s heart, with black-and-white granite chessboard floor of black and gold.
Lobby
With handsome European fiddleback cherrywood panelling and a leather topped ebony bar, Le Magritte bar was named after René Magritte’s Le Maitre d’Ecole, which hangs at the back of the bar. The collection of signature, character portraiture along the walls is impressive, and there’s a new outdoor patio as well. The glamorous Gatsby’s Room/cafe, with chandeliers and a baby grand piano, is a pleasure.
Guest rooms retain an European Art Deco air of manly sophistication with soft leathers, bronze accents; creams and browns: interesting portraits; and bookshelves laden with flapper and bootlegger books. The new Thierry Despont-designed Mayfair Suite on the first floor has the best view, overlooking the quiet Mayfair’s Brown Hart Gardens. But prepare to work a second job to pay the costs.
Bedroom