
Tripadvisor
A five-star hotel in Marylebone, eight minutes from Lord's and home to one of London's better-known atrium restaurants
The Landmark London sits on Marylebone Road, a ten-minute walk from Marylebone station and about eight minutes by taxi from the Grace Gates at Lord's. It opened in 1899 as the Great Central Hotel, was rescued from decades of neglect in the 1990s, and has been operating as a five-star property ever since. The building is Victorian railway hotel in scale — 300 rooms across eight floors around a central atrium — and the atrium is the thing most people remember.
The Winter Garden restaurant occupies the ground floor of that atrium. Eight-storey glass roof, palm trees, white tablecloths. It does breakfast, lunch and dinner, and an afternoon tea that has a following of its own — around £45 a head, with a harpist on weekends. It's the kind of room that looks slightly unreal the first time you walk into it.
Rooms are large by London standards and well insulated from the noise of Marylebone Road. The standard category is comfortable without being memorable; the superior and deluxe rooms face the atrium or gardens and are worth the step up if you're here for a few nights. The spa and health club is being refurbished until July 2026, so for the Lord's ODI on 19 July it should be back open — worth confirming at booking.
The location works well for cricket. Lord's is north of here via a short cab or a pleasant 25-minute walk through Regent's Park if the weather cooperates. Marylebone itself has good restaurants and independent shops within a few minutes on foot — Chiltern Street, Blandford Street, the Marylebone High Street stretch. You won't be short of options for the evening after the match.
It's expensive. Rates for match week will reflect that. But for a Lord's ODI trip where you want a proper London base rather than just somewhere to sleep, the Landmark makes sense.
Why it's special
The Winter Garden atrium is genuinely unlike anything else in London hotels at this price point. Most five-star properties in the city lean on history or location — the Landmark has both, but the atrium is the thing that actually stays with you. Eight storeys of glass, mature palms, natural light even on a grey July morning. Breakfast there before a match day has a particular quality to it.
The hotel's location in Marylebone is also underrated for a cricket trip. St John's Wood, where Lord's sits, is one of the quietest and most residential corners of inner London — genuinely pleasant to walk through, but with limited dinner options after a match. Having a base in Marylebone gives you access to a proper neighbourhood with restaurants, bars and shops without the chaos of central London.
For Indian supporters in particular, Marylebone and the surrounding area has a strong South Asian dining scene — Dishoom on Granby Row, Gymkhana a short cab away in Mayfair. The hotel itself caters well to international guests and the Winter Garden has a halal afternoon tea menu, which is worth knowing.
The Winter Garden does breakfast until 10:30am on weekdays and 11am on weekends. On a match day morning, arriving at 9am rather than rushing means you get the full atrium experience rather than a quick coffee at the bar. Worth building into your schedule.
Marylebone station is directly across the road and runs Chiltern Railways services. If you're coming from Birmingham after the Edgbaston ODI on 14 July, this is a direct route into the hotel — no need to cross London from Euston or Paddington.
Don't book a Marylebone Road-facing room without checking the floor. Lower floors face heavy traffic and the noise carries despite the double glazing. Ask for an atrium-facing or garden-facing room, or a road-facing room above the fourth floor.
Don't assume the spa will definitely be open — the refurbishment is scheduled to complete by July 2026 but confirm when booking if it matters to you.