Mayfair’s most revered address has long been synonymous with discretion, elegance, and a certain unspoken magic. But even by its own impossibly high standards, The Connaught’s latest unveiling—the Connaught Suite Collection—ushers in a new chapter of private, in-suite grandeur that is both rooted in heritage and dazzlingly modern in its ambitions. It is, in every sense, the consummate embodiment of fine living—Connaught style.
With the newly restored suites and rooms programme, led by the brilliant minds of designer Guy Oliver, architect Michael Blair, and David Collins Studio, The Connaught has breathed even deeper life into its iconic interiors. The result is a curation of 34 uniquely expressive suites—each one a mood, a memory, a Mayfair moment waiting to unfold. Whether it’s the urban tranquillity of the Terrace Suite, with its leafy rooftop views and modern contours; the studious opulence of the Library Suite; or the unapologetic theatricality of the Sutherland Suite, where a grand piano beckons you to play just one note and stay the night—each suite tells its own quiet story.

But what truly sets the Connaught Suite Collection apart is the artful layering of experiences, available exclusively to suite guests. More than a stay, it’s an invitation into a world behind closed doors—a world where a personal butler unpacks your luggage with military precision, where martinis arrive chilled directly from The Connaught Bar (twice crowned the Best Bar in the World), and where the hands of Aman Spa’s expert therapists transform your own suite into a sanctuary of wellness. It’s not just luxury; it’s orchestration.
The Collection also plays host to a cinematic homage as stylish as it is sentimental. In partnership with the British Film Institute, The Connaught offers a curated library of silver-screen classics, each featuring legendary icons who once graced these hallowed hallways. Picture Lauren Bacall in To Have and Have Not or Grace Kelly in Rear Window, flickering on your suite’s screen as you sip Champagne and sink deeper into the hotel’s nostalgic embrace. There is an invisible thread here, from past to present, between art and patron, glamour and intimacy.



General Manager Sandeep Bhalla describes it best: “We have such a rich choice of wonderful experiences on offer at The Connaught, it felt only right that for the first time, we can now offer them to our guests in the privacy of their elegant suites. We can even provide our own Connaught Concert Pianist to play should the mood call for it.”
That’s the thing about The Connaught—it doesn’t follow trends, it sets them, quietly, confidently, and always with grace. Even the finer flourishes are poetic. Take the John Lobb shoeshine service, a nod to the historic shoemakers who’ve been burnishing leather since 1866, now shining your own in-suite shoes with reverence. Or the welcome patisserie, crafted with whimsy and precision by Nicolas Rouzaud, whose name now graces the hotel’s newly christened cake atelier, a destination in its own right.


Culinary excellence, of course, pulses through the veins of The Connaught. Home to Hélène Darroze’s three-Michelin-starred marvel, Jean-Georges Vongerichten’s eponymous restaurant, and the exquisitely reimagined Connaught Grillby woodwork virtuoso Mira Nakashima, the hotel remains an epicurean Eden. Add the rarefied atmosphere of The Coburg Bar, its whisky collection rivalled only by its velvet hush, and the cigar connoisseur’s dream that is The Connaught Cigar Merchants, and one quickly realises: you never need to leave the building to experience the best of London.
The launch of the Suite Collection is not merely a hospitality upgrade—it is a philosophical one. It reflects a more intimate form of luxury, one that leans into stillness, craftsmanship, and the slow pleasures of tailored moments. And in a world increasingly obsessed with access and exposure, The Connaught reminds us that privacy, elegance, and provenance still reign supreme.

Each suite comes with a list of generous offerings—Billecart-Salmon Champagne on arrival, a personal butler at your beck and call, in-room treatments, an unpacking and packing service, and naturally, that silver-screen library curated by the BFI. But even these inclusions feel more like gestures than amenities—an echo of The Connaught’s enduring ethos: that true luxury lies not in opulence, but in intention.
To stay here is to step into a parallel Mayfair—a quieter, more refined version of the city, where every detail is considered and every moment holds meaning. And with rates beginning from £1,440 inclusive of VAT, The Connaught Suite Collection is not for the ordinary traveller—it’s for the aesthete, the dreamer, the connoisseur of comfort and culture.
To reserve your suite, visit www.the-connaught.co.uk.