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- A sincere wellness ethos driven by founder Nadira Lalji; Inhabit feels intentionally built for restoration and present sense awareness.
- Thoughtful design and art-filled spaces create calm: Queen’s Suite's generous windows, freestanding bathtub, pink sinks, and abundant natural light.
- Wellness amenities include an infrared sauna, Peloton bikes, treatment rooms, and Yeotown's mainly meat-free menu focused on restoration.
- Best for slow, restorative stays — book the Queen’s Suite, linger longer, enjoy morning light, sauna, and dinner at Yeotown.
Can a London hotel truly help you slow down? In this contributor feature, Deborah Kombe checks into Inhabit Queen’s Gardens Hotel in Bayswater to discover whether a wellness-focused stay can offer genuine restoration amidst the pace of city life. Through thoughtful reflections on rest, design, and wellbeing, she explores how this London retreat rekindled the same sense of calm she first experienced in Mallorca.
Some Places Follow You Home
There are places that stay with you longer than the journey home. Mallorca was one of them, not for anything I could point to on a map, but for a particular quality of ease I hadn’t expected to find.
I wasn’t looking for it when I walked into Inhabit Queen’s Gardens. But I found something there that recognised me, or perhaps it was the other way around. A similar unhurried quality. A sense that rest wasn’t a reward you had to earn.
Now that spring has arrived in London, tentatively at first and then all at once, both places keep returning to me. I think the thread connecting them might be intention.
Inhabit Hotels has two London properties: Queen’s Gardens in Bayswater, and a sister hotel on Southwick Street in Paddington. Together they form something rarer than a wellness concept, a hospitality brand that seems to genuinely mean it. Centred on restoring healthy habits at a relatively accessible price point, it caught my attention while I was quietly searching for somewhere in London that offered what Mallorca had given me so effortlessly. I found it, somewhat appropriately, by accident.
The Hotel That Actually Means It
Inhabit was founded by Nadira Lalji, whose love of mindfulness and art is visible throughout the hotel. Her vision for the brand was “a place for restoration and present-sense awareness,” and you feel that before you’ve even checked in.
In an interview with Design Hotels, she was asked what wellbeing means to her personally. Her answer:
What is interesting is that wealth, by definition, is well-being. The origins of the word “wealth” are in the Old English word “weal,” which means “well-being” or “welfare.” To possess well-being is to be wealthy in the purest and truest sense.
I read it twice. Then I saved it to my notes under “quotes and captions,” just in case it might find its way into an Instagram story one day. Make of that what you will.
It echoed something I’d been quietly arriving at myself: that feeling well within myself and within my environment is its own form of success. Which is why, I’ll argue somewhat cheekily, staying in beautiful hotels is genuinely good for your health.
It’s a shift I’ve been noticing across hospitality more broadly, and one I explored in my piece on Hyde London City and LOOKFANTASTIC, where the best hotel experiences are moving away from product placement toward something more emotionally considered.

A Scenic Walk. Largely Unintentional.
The closest station to Inhabit Queen’s Gardens is Paddington, from which it’s a pleasant walk through elegant white stucco streets to the hotel. I, however, walked all the way from Lancaster Gate because my maps sent me to the wrong location entirely. Very restorative start, Debs. A small lesson: copy and paste the full address directly from the hotel’s website rather than searching by name. Typing “Inhabit” alone may take you to a co-working space on Threadneedle Street, which is a different kind of wellness experience entirely.
Upon arrival, a kind doorman took my luggage and directed me to reception. Just off the entrance is Yeotown, the hotel’s restaurant, with a meat-free menu built around restoration. I only had breakfast there, but more on that shortly. The reception, lounge, and pantry area sit adjacent, and to my surprise the space was livelier than I’d expected. I’ll be honest: I’d half expected reverent silence and guests padding around in linen. What I found instead was people genuinely at ease, chatting and catching up in a space so thoughtfully designed that they seemed comfortable enough to simply be themselves. That, in its own way, felt quite special.
The Queen’s Suite
After checking in, I was shown to the Queen’s Suite. The first thing I noticed were the windows. Large, generous, and looking out onto one of those small garden squares in the middle of the street, surrounded by beautiful townhouses. I felt like I was in Bridgerton. I was not unhappy about this.
To the right upon entering was a generous king-sized bed and a drinks station. Straight ahead, a desk topped with a welcome basket containing what is now my favourite drink, Lemon-Aid, a healthy, organic fizzy drink that actually tastes good. Alongside it were a few snacks, a bottle of wine, and a handwritten welcome note. A communal drinks station in the hallway offered water and tea for guests throughout the day, a small but genuinely charming touch.


A creative room divider did beautiful structural work: on one side, the television and storage; on the other, two pink sinks, a freestanding bathtub, and a separate enclosed shower and toilet. The pink sinks against black hardware were particularly striking. I took more photographs than I’ll admit. For the article, obviously. Absolutely not because they are now living in a folder on my phone called “future home inspo.” A colourful bathroom is one of life’s underrated pleasures, the one room where you can genuinely have fun with design, go bold with tiling, and still land somewhere beautiful and elegant.
The room measured around 23 to 26 square metres, but was proportioned so thoughtfully that it felt larger. Natural light filled the space throughout the day, along with the quiet rhythm of London taxis and locals going about their day.
An Evening In
After a long day on my feet, the first thing I did was run a bath. After ordering food, naturally. Wellness has its limits. By the time I stepped out, my Deliveroo order had arrived, kindly brought up by the staff. I spent the evening with a Pizza Pilgrims pizza, my new favourite fizz, a television series, and a book. Kennedy Ryan, you will always be famous. Then lights off, and an impressively peaceful night’s sleep. The bed was a little firmer than my personal preference, but I slept well regardless.

Morning, and Breakfast
Waking up was a joy. I pulled back the blackout curtains and let the morning in slowly. The kind of start that doesn’t ask anything of you immediately.
The shower deserves a mention too. Separate from the bath, which sounds like a small thing until you’ve stayed somewhere where they aren’t, and just a genuinely lovely experience from start to finish. After getting ready, I headed downstairs for breakfast.
Breakfast was an interesting experience. The menu was more limited than I’d expected: it began with a small bowl of fruit, a croissant, and a ginger shot, and I opted for the English breakfast, which arrived with a plant-based sausage, one egg, toast, cherry tomatoes, mushrooms, microgreens, and pine kernels. Was it nice? Yes. Was I expecting a little more? Also yes. The online menu appears more extensive than what was offered during my stay, so it’s worth checking ahead so expectations are aligned. That said, I left nourished and ready for the day, which is ultimately the point.
After breakfast, I explored the rest of the hotel. The library looked like an ideal place to read or work quietly. The wellness space, with its infrared sauna, Peloton bikes, and treatment rooms, is firmly on my list for a return visit. One night simply wasn’t enough to enjoy it at the pace it deserves.
As a self-proclaimed artist (photography and writing absolutely count), Inhabit speaks to something particular in me. The artwork displayed throughout, the considered design, the sense that the space has been built around a certain kind of sensitivity: it all adds up to something you feel rather than analyse.
Should You Stay?
Should you stay here? That depends on what you’re looking for, and I mean that as a genuine recommendation rather than a hedge. Inhabit Queen’s Gardens is great at what it does: restoration as a considered, intentional experience. If that’s what you need right now, it will deliver. If you’re someone who needs a little more texture or energy from a hotel stay, you might find it slightly quiet for your particular rhythm. I fall somewhere in between, which is how I know it’s doing its job properly.
What I can say with confidence: if you go, stay for more than one night. Book the Queen’s Suite if you can, for that bathtub and the light alone. Give yourself the morning. Wake slowly, have breakfast, take a walk through the neighbourhood, return for the sauna, a treatment, and dinner at Yeotown. No check-in pressure, no check-out looming. Just the particular luxury of having nowhere else to be.

Still Thinking About It
That’s what Mallorca taught me. And it’s what Inhabit, on a quiet street in Bayswater, quietly reminded me of.
Rooms at Inhabit Queen’s Gardens start from £173 per night. The hotel is a short walk from Paddington station. Visit inhabit-hotels.com to book.
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