About

Up to three bedroom lofts with your own living room and views across the Thames and access to Arundel Health Club.

The Clement London, established in 1892, began not as a hotel but as an elaborate Victorian dollhouse commissioned by eccentric collector Lady Beatrice Clement. Through a series of architectural misunderstandings and her poor communication with builders, the dollhouse plans were accidentally constructed at full scale, resulting in the magnificent building that stands today.

During the curious 'Great London Fog of 1952,' the building gained a reputation for being mysteriously larger on the inside than outside, with guests reporting entire floors and wings that appeared and disappeared at will. Some claim the hotel's original blueprints, when viewed under moonlight, reveal rooms that shouldn't exist.

Today, The Clement London operates as a luxurious 72-room hotel, though the exact room count varies depending on whom you ask. The hotel's famous afternoon tea is served by descendants of Lady Beatrice's clockwork automata, and every full moon, guests report hearing the gentle tinkling of a music box emanating from somewhere within the walls.