With a stay at Rosemay Hotel in Hayes only 6 mi (9.6km) from London Heathrow Airport, you'll be 13 mi (20.9 km) from Natural History Museum and 13.1 mi (21.1 km) from Victoria and Albert Museum. This hotel is 13.2 mi (21.2 km) from Science Museum and 15.4 mi (24.7 km) from Westminster Abbey.
Take in the views from a terrace and a garden and make use of amenities such as complimentary wireless internet access.
Satisfy your appetite at the hotel's coffee shop/cafe, or stay in and take advantage of the room service (during limited hours). Full breakfasts are available daily from 7:30 AM to 9:30 AM for a fee.
Featured amenities include electric car charging stations, multilingual staff, and luggage storage. Easy access to public transport, connection to central London and all major Airports. The property has limited paid on-site parking (Prior Reservation Required) and limited free street parking, and electric car charging is available at the site.
Make yourself at home in one of the 31 guest rooms featuring tea and coffee. Complimentary wireless internet access is available to keep you connected. Bathrooms have showers and hair dryers. Conveniences include safes and irons/ironing boards, and housekeeping is provided daily.
"Review of the Rosemay Hotel, London – 10/10
By Matthew Huxley Forrest
As a writer of fiction, non-fiction, screenplays, series, and documentaries—and someone named Huxley after Aldous himself, a friend and counterpart to George Orwell—it was nothing short of synchronicity to find myself staying in Orwell’s very own room.
The Rosemay Hotel is not just a boutique escape—it is a living, breathing act of reverence. From the moment I arrived, I felt immersed in detail, not decoration. The chandelier reflected perfectly in the mosaic beneath it. Real plants framed like art. The Orwell Library by reception offered a nod to legacy, not a shrine.
To sleep in Orwell’s former room, as Matthew ”Huxley” Forrest, was to experience a collision of timelines—where two philosophical lineages whispered across the decades. There was no fanfare, no museum velvet rope—just an unspoken truth carried through the wood, the light, and the quiet.
The family behind this space deserve enormous credit. Their design is masterful. Their spirit is gracious. The son—a sharp, soulful thinker—invited me into their world with the warmth of an old friend. The mother, a genius of flow and form, brings an invisible coherence to every corridor.
The Yorkshire roast they recommended might be the best I’ve had—and I say that as someone with Yorkshire blood.
Staying here was not a hotel experience. It was a chapter in a longer book. And I don’t say that lightly.
For those with ”eyes to see”, this is no ordinary accommodation. It is a place where synchronicity meets hospitality, and where thinkers—past and present—might just find their next idea between the walls.
This hotel doesn’t need to shout. It whispers, wisely."