"This hotel is a glamorous riot of copper and brass marooned on the South Bank. The location is extraordinary—you can tick off Tate Modern and The London Eye before the rest of the tourists have finished their morning tea and toast. Upon arrival, you get the message that this is a hotel that doesn’t take itself too seriously—a great copper hull, based on the 19th-century clipper the Cutty Sark, has crashed into reception, which is next door to Lyaness bar with mixologist Ryan Chetiyawardana A.K.A Mr Lyan at the helm." - Nicholas DeRenzo, CNT Editors
"How did it strike you on arrival?The hotel is a glamorous riot of copper and brass marooned on the South Bank. The location is extraordinary—you can tick off Tate Modern and The London Eye before the rest of the tourists have finished their morning tea and toast. Upon arrival, you get the message that this is a hotel that doesn’t take itself too seriously—a great copper hull, based on the 19th-century clipper the Cutty Sark, has crashed into reception, which is next door to Lyaness bar with mixologist Ryan Chetiyawardana A.K.A Mr Lyan at the helm. Nice. What’s the crowd like?A mixed bag of pleasure-seekers and pretend work-trippers. The good stuff: Tell us about your room.Roughly a third of the 359 rooms have river views. The cabin-style standard rooms are snug, but they’ve been cleverly designed with plenty of room for your things as well as a Tom Dixon chair. The grey and hot pink color scheme remains the same through all room categories, but furnishings get increasingly exciting, with copper pendant lights and the like in suites. Please tell us the bathroom won’t let us down.Slick monochrome bathrooms have rain showers. Suites also come with a freestanding bath. Maybe the most important topic of all: Wi-Fi. What’s the word?Free. Anything stand out about other services and features? Whether it’s childcare, gyms, spas, even parking—whatever stuck with you.The basement Agua Spa is a dream, with a bathhouse-style thermal suite and treatments from a library of wellness approaches to pick from. The restaurant is relaxingly informal, and drinking in the rooftop bar, 12th Knot, feels like partying on the deck of a ship. Bottom line: worth it, and why?Sea Containers doesn't look like anywhere else—it's glamorous without being pretentious." - Laura Goulden
"Set on the South Bank with views of the Thames and close to major cultural sites, this hotel channels 1920s cruise-liner glamour—copper-accented reception, maritime-themed rooms and a top-deck indoor-outdoor rooftop bar with panoramic city views. Design touches echo shipboard life across public spaces, the spa and a theater; food and drink are a major draw, anchored by a high-profile ground-floor bar from a celebrated mixologist known for inventive signature-ingredient cocktails, which regularly fills up and requires reservations." - Jennifer Flowers, Annie Fitzsimmons, Katherine LaGrave
"Originally built by American architect Warren Platner to be a hotel, this building instead became the headquarters for a sea containers company that eventually went broke. London's designer of the moment, Tom Dixon and Universal Design Studio, completely revamped the building, with plenty of nods to Platner and the building's nautical past, including a copper-clad reception area resembling a ship's hull and the aptly named Sea Containers restaurant. Plus, the subterranean spa is incredible (the Alexandra Soveral signature treatment is a game-changer), and the plush,thoughtfully turned-out rooms boast views of the Thames, something that no other London hotel can claim."
"A new discovery for us, Agua Spa is located under the hypermodern Sea Containers hotel (formerly the Mondrian) and designed by Tom Dixon. It’s the antithesis of a normal spa. There are no hard corners, only undulating surfaces that curve into corridors and communal spaces, and the color scheme is white, grey, and silver. The whole vibe is more akin to a spaceship or a futuristic cocoon than the usual wood/cotton/natural-light mix. The manicures and pedicures are both indulgent and blessedly efficient, but of all the treatments, the Soveral Signature Facial is one we come back to again and again. If you’re into lymphatic massage, aromatherapy, and nontoxic beauty, you won’t be disappointed. We also found ourselves in the womblike relaxation area sipping herbal tea and reading newspapers (thoughtfully left by each bed) long after our appointment ended. "