London, United Kingdom

Shoreditch House

Price per night from$328.13

Price information

If you haven’t entered any dates, the rate shown is provided directly by the hotel and represents the cheapest double room (inclusive of taxes and fees) available in the next 60 days.

Prices have been converted from the hotel’s local currency (GBP255.00), via openexchangerates.org, using today’s exchange rate.

Style

Cool crash-pad club

Setting

Behind Brick Lane

Shoreditch House is members' club with rooms, set in a converted warehouse in London’s gentrified East End. Take a dip in the iconic rooftop pool or hit the Cowshed spa for a muscle-melting massage. This easterly outpost of Soho House has opened its doors for the public to sneak in, party hard then crash out in comfort.

Please note, if you are not a Soho House member, to access this members-only property a 12-month Soho Friends membership will be added to your booking for £100. This membership covers one room a stay for the member and any additional rooms booked for their children under 18.

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A bottle of wine

Facilities

Photos Shoreditch House facilities

Need to know

Rooms

26.

Check–Out

Noon, but flexible if there’s availability. Earliest check-in, 3pm.

More details

Rates exclude breakfast.

Also

A Soho Friends membership (which will be added to non-member room rates for an additional £100) is a global membership that gives you access to Soho House bedrooms, plus benefits at spas, restaurants, Cowshed, Studios and Soho Home. Please note, Soho Friends membership does not give you direct access to the Club, and only covers the room booked and any additional rooms for children under 18; additional rooms booked for guests aged 18 and over will be charged the membership fee for each room. If you have purchased a Soho Friends membership through Mr & Mrs Smith within the past year, please call our travel team directly to book your Soho Friends member rates. Please note, existing Soho House members should book directly through Soho House as Mr & Mrs Smith cannot offer their membership discount.

At the hotel

Access to Soho Health Club, Cowshed spa, gardens, lounge, library, ping-pong tables, free WiFi throughout. In rooms: flatscreen TV, minibar with pre-mixed house cocktails, hair-straighteners, full-size Cowshed products and free bottled water, tea and homemade biscuits.

Our favourite rooms

The names (Tiny, Small and Small Plus) give the game away size-wise, but book a Small Plus and you’ll also get a roomy City-facing terrace. For the widest views, ask for corner room 26 and ogle the Gherkin from your sunlounger.

Poolside

There’s a sunlounger-surrounded heated pool on the roof, with a bar close by. It’s open daily from 8am to 10pm, and adults-only from noon onwards. Just behind, the garden area has open fires, a herb plot and double day beds.

Spa

The hotel has a Cowshed spa, with treatments including the famous facials, massages tailored to your mood and a list of special maternity therapies. Elsewhere in the Soho Health Club, you’ll find a sauna and classes covering everything from HIIT and yoga to barre and boxing. Grab a smoothie at the health club bar to keep spirits high between sessions.

Packing tips

There’s a ‘Borrow Me’ section filled with things to play with, read and watch – so leave the board games and books behind.

Also

The hotel is accessible by elevator only up to the fifth floor, after which it’s stairs only.

Children

Extra beds can be added into Small rooms for £50 a night and cots can be added for £15 a night. Children are allowed in Fifth floor and the Games Room until 6pm and in the Pen Yen until 9pm.

Sustainability efforts

It’s reassuring to know that Soho House are working to deliver an environmental impact strategy across their sites. With 2030 goals set to enhance and standardise recycling programmes and responsible food-waste management at every outpost of the member’s club globally. They also work with local suppliers selected for their like-minded responsibility. In the kitchen, there’s scrutiny around how Soho House sources coffee, cocoa and palm oil, as well as sustainable seafood and responsibly reared meat. Expect greater choice of meat-free dishes and seasonal ingredients whenever practical. Measures to assess Soho House’s carbon footprint and reduce emissions are ongoing.

Food and Drink

Photos Shoreditch House food and drink

Top Table

For more privacy and date-wowing views, ask for the corner table on Pen Yen’s sixth floor.

Dress Code

Baggy jeans, cravats and all forms of head gear.

Hotel restaurant

The cosy fifth-floor kitchen dishes up British favourites, wood-fired pizzas and hearty international dishes such as mac and cheese, poke bowls and club steaks; there's plenty of plant-based fare for veggies, too. Tangerine chesterfield sofas and shared wooden tables sit beneath displays of mix ‘n’ match artworks – some of which may well be the work of your fellow diners. Upstairs, the sixth-floor izakaya-style restaurant Pen Yen is bracketed by the rooftop pool on one side and twinkling London views on the other. Expect sharing plates of sushi and sashimi along with a roster of robata-grill mains like tender black cod, sticky pork ribs and soy-glazed tofu steak. 

Hotel bar

The action’s mostly on the fifth floor, where you’ll find a strip of ping-pong tables that double as communal workstations and meeting spaces during the day. There’s a DJ on Friday and Saturday nights, and a photo booth to immortalise your Shoreditch shenanigans (after all, phones are very much frowned upon). Perch on a leather bar stool or take your drinks skywards to the roof or another lounge area. Tucked away behind an unmarked door, the Library hosts intimate concerts, informal talks and masterclasses – cocktail coupettes optional (but strongly recommended).

Last orders

Dining is from 7am to 11.30pm Monday to Saturday, 8am to 10.30pm on Sundays. The Fifth Floor’s after-hours menu runs from 11.30pm to 3am Monday to Saturday, 10.30pm to midnight on Sundays. Drinks are served until 3am (midnight on Sundays).

Room service

Breakfast and a light menu of quiches, salads and sandwiches can be served to your room.

Location

Photos Shoreditch House location
Address
Shoreditch House
Ebor Street
London
E1 6AW
United Kingdom

Shoreditch House shares an entrance with its members club, a hop across the road from Shoreditch High Street Overground station and a short walk from Brick Lane, Spitalfields Market and Liverpool Street.

Planes

London’s City airport is a 20-minute drive from Shoreditch House. From Stansted, the Stansted Express will get you to Liverpool Street in no time. Driving, you’re looking at 50 minutes along the M11. International travellers can also use Gatwick, a little over an hour away.

Trains

The nearest National Rail station is London Liverpool Street. National Express train services run from here all over East Anglia. Various Tube lines also call in here, including the Central, Elizabeth and Circle lines; Old Street Tube station on the Northern line is around a 10-minute walk away. If you're headed to Peckham (that other bastion of cool), the overground across the street will deliver you there in 30 minutes.

Automobiles

The A10 might help if you’ve come by car, but there are enough buses and Tubes to get you on your way around the capital. There’s no parking at the hotel.

Worth getting out of bed for

On Sundays, make sure you wander down to Columbia Road for some bartering with East End traders at the flower market. Shoppers will love Spitalfields, which opens on Thursdays for antiques and vintage, Fridays for fashion and art, and Sundays for everything. Combine a curry with searching for second-hand clothing on a trip to Brick Lane. If you’ve brought children along, take them to Hackney City Farm to spy on the array of donkeys, turkeys and pigs. Something of a local legend, Caravan at 3 Redchurch Street serves up an eclectic mix of ‘beautiful things’ – from knick-knacks to furniture, lighting to books.

Local restaurants

Pop next door to the Tea Building for pizza courtesy of Pizza East, a converted warehouse restaurant with classic (mozzarella and tomato) and unusual (cheese-less with prawns) takes on the Italian favourite. Meat fans will find a second home at the Hoxton Grill on Great Eastern Street and some of the finest steak in town at Hawksmoor in neighbouring Spitalfields.

Local cafés

Bringing a spot of Aussie café culture to the east end, Attendant’s sustainably-sourced green coffee is roasted in-house to bring out the best of the bean. Curtain street veteran Fwd: Coffee (formerly Fix 126) is another grind-happy grandmaster whose liquid enlightenment comes courtesy of local brew pioneers Climpson and Sons.

Local bars

Call in to Callooh Callay on Rivington Street for some finely mixed cocktails, including punch served in a gramophone. Round the corner, try Lounge Bohemia on Great Eastern Street for basement-based Eastern European drinks. At the Commercial Tavern down the road on Commercial Street, sip from tumblers and admire the chandeliers. For an impressive inventory of Czech beers and classic cocktails, settle in among the exposed brick walls of Prague on Kingsland Road.

Reviews

Photos Shoreditch House reviews
Claire Nelson

Anonymous review

By Claire Nelson, Determined adventurer

At Shoreditch House you’re drop-pinned into London’s epicentre of cool, a definition that stretches widely from East End to high-end. It is, for want of a better word, hip round here. Of course the hotel is in a converted tea warehouse. Of course.

I’ve only ever known Shoreditch House as a place to meet someone more stylish than me; someone with a membership. The House itself is a multi-floor, members-only haven, with two restaurants, a rooftop pool, and workspace/library frequented by creatives and their guests. Hot-desking tables by day become ping-pong tables at night. I do wonder what all this bustle will do to a good night’s sleep, but I find the hotel is a separate wing, accessed via its own lift from the entrance lobby. Rooms only share hallways with other rooms, avoiding any disturbance from the movements of the late-night Hackney Coachella crowd that spills excitedly into the lobby for post-work sundowners.

I check in with the friendly hotel concierge who, with the kind of easy charm you feel with an old friend, compliments me on looking so refreshed for having come off 28 hours of flying. I’m warming to the place already. Room categories cleverly set one’s expectations: Tiny, Small, and Small Plus. But even having sprung for the Small Plus I’m surprised how spacious it is. Sure, there might not be room to swing a cat here, but there’s enough room to kick back and have a drink with one.

It’s light and airy, with a shuttered sliding-door that opens to a little terrace: a great place to people-watch commuters pouring out of Shoreditch High Street station (and feel a bit smug – ‘I used to be like you’) or to enjoy a bird’s-eye perspective of the neighbourhood’s vivid street-art murals. Unassuming double doors reveal a generous, tiled bathroom, stocked even more generously with a collection of Soho Skin products, everything from cleanser and serum to eye cream and lip balm. That’s not even the extent of the toiletries – there’s a whole array of full-sized Cowshed shower products (from the onsite spa) to choose from.

Frankly, the degree of thought that has gone into things makes me swoon. Hair dryer and hair straightener. Robes and flip flops. Ear plugs and toothbrush… I could have rolled up with merely a change of clothes. The mini bar is well set up for cocktails, while a cupboard in the bureau (honestly, how have they fit so much stuff in here?) rolls out a full coffee machine and china tea set. There are both dairy and oat milks in the fridge, and a canister of complimentary cookies, restocked daily.

One should save the appetite for dinner though. I’ve opted for Pen Yen, the izakaya-style restaurant on the rooftop, a space draped in plants and bathed in ambient lighting. For once I’m the House member bringing a guest, and my friend and I tuck in to black cod gyoza, smoky, wood-fired broccoli, and prawn tempura with eat-with-a-spoon wasabi mayo. From the table we people-watch the evening crowd hustling to the bar, or cozying up on striped poolside loungers in their winter coats. As we finish with a nightcap old-fashioned it’s clear people are still just getting their night started. I expect the hubbub to keep me awake, but the separated hotel wing works a treat.

It’s jetlag that wakes me up early, peach sunlight turning the streets, with their rubbish trolleys, aglow outside. And in an attempt to get my body on London time I head to the gym, another separate wing of the House. I snag myself a Peloton before any of the stylishly clad, pre-work members do. And then to breakfast.

House policies forbid phones, and it makes for a refreshing atmosphere; everyone is either in quiet conversation or lost in morning newspapers. Someone in a corner booth is discussing a TV script. Gentle light falls in the windows and spotlights the low-key eclectic art on the restaurant’s gallery wall. I could get used to this. But then the moment comes. Check-out is – very generously – not until midday but somehow this still comes around too quickly and I struggle to peel myself away. This House has come to feel rather too comfortably like home, and the idea of returning not only to the cacophonous hurry of the outside world but to my former, uncool self, is a harsh consideration.

‘Would you like to leave your luggage with us?’ asks the concierge. Actually, I’d like to leave myself here, thanks. And can you send up some more of those cookies, please, because I uncoolly ate the lot.

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Price per night from $328.13