Treehouse Hotel London

Treehouse Hotel London occupies a Langham Place address that puts it a short walk from Oxford Circus and the BBC's historic Broadcasting House. A Michelin Selected property for 2025, it sits in the mid-luxury tier of London's hotel market, offering a design-led alternative to the neighbourhood's more formal competitors. The playful brand identity and central positioning make it a practical anchor for both leisure and short-stay business travel.
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- Address
- 14-15 Langham Pl, London W1B 2QS, United Kingdom
- Phone
- +44 20 7580 0111
- Website
- treehousehotels.com

Langham Place and the Hotel That Grew Above It
The stretch of Regent Street that curves into Langham Place carries a particular kind of London density: broadcasting institutions, concert halls, and a hotel corridor that ranges from heritage grand dames to newer entrants pitching design-led informality. Treehouse Hotel London, at 14-15 Langham Place, positions itself in that second category. Its address places it within walking distance of Oxford Circus to the south and the Marylebone dining corridor to the north, and the neighbourhood context matters: this is not a Mayfair property asking guests to pay for postcode prestige, nor a boutique conversion relying on a single atmospheric room. It occupies a mid-luxury register that has grown considerably in London over the past decade, as travellers began choosing character and convenience over either pure heritage or pure minimalism.
Michelin Selected status does not carry the numerical distinction of Keys, but it functions as a quality floor: properties must meet consistent standards across comfort, character, and service before appearing in the guide at all. Michelin Selected status does not carry the numerical distinction of Keys, but it functions as a quality floor: properties must meet consistent standards across comfort, character, and service before appearing in the guide at all. In a city where London hotel listings run into the thousands, that filter carries practical weight for a first-time guest trying to calibrate expectations.
Where Treehouse Sits in the London Hotel Market
London's hotel market at the mid-to-upper end has fragmented into recognisable camps. The historic grande dame tier, represented by properties like Claridge's, The Connaught, and The Savoy, commands rates that reflect both address and institutional weight accumulated over a century or more. At the other end of the spectrum, independently branded properties with a defined design identity, such as NoMad London, have entered the market targeting guests who want a recognisable brand ethos without a conventional luxury-hotel formality. Treehouse Hotel London operates in adjacent territory to that second group. Its brand, which also has a New York presence, draws on an aesthetic that leans informal and nature-referencing, positioning the product against a guest who values atmosphere and location over ceremony.
For comparison, the heavier institutional investments in London's luxury tier, such as Raffles London at The OWO or The Emory, are targeting a different price band and a different expectation of service depth. Treehouse is not competing with those properties directly. Its competitive set is closer to the design-minded Michelin Selected tier, where 1 Hotel Mayfair and 11 Cadogan Gardens each make different arguments about what a considered London stay should feel like.
The Langham Place Address: What It Gives You
Location in London hotel decisions is never a single variable. Langham Place sits at the northern end of Regent Street, which means Oxford Circus and the Central line are under ten minutes on foot. The Elizabeth line at Bond Street adds Heathrow connectivity that many Marylebone and Fitzrovia guests now treat as a primary transit consideration. Broadcasting House is immediate, and the Wigmore Hall and Royal Academy of Music are within a short walk, which makes the address useful for guests with arts-adjacent itineraries.
The neighbourhood does not have the restaurant concentration of Soho or the Marylebone High Street strip, but both are close enough that dining out does not require a cab.
Food and Drink at Treehouse: The Rooftop Argument
Hotels in this category increasingly treat their food and drink offering as the primary lever for driving repeat visits and walk-in trade. The rooftop bar format has become almost a requirement at this tier in London, and Treehouse Hotel London's Nest rooftop has been cited in multiple editorial contexts as one of the property's central draws. At altitude, with a view line that takes in the city skyline, the format works differently from a ground-floor bar: the vertical separation changes the pace of service and the dwell time guests expect.
The approach to the hotel's food programme reflects a broader trend across mid-luxury London properties: menus tend toward accessible all-day formats rather than formal tasting structures, which suits the transient, mixed-use nature of a city-centre property where guests may be checking in from an early flight or heading out to a dinner reservation elsewhere. The structure points to versatility rather than formality, with rooftop bar service and hotel dining geared to an easy all-day rhythm.
Planning Your Stay: Practical Notes
Treehouse Hotel London is at 14-15 Langham Place, London, directly accessible from Oxford Circus station on the Bakerloo, Central, and Victoria lines. The Elizabeth line at Bond Street or Tottenham Court Road extends the transit options for airport connections. Booking is best handled through the hotel's direct channels or established platforms to confirm current rates. The property is also Michelin Selected for 2025, a useful quality benchmark when comparing options across the city.
Guests comparing this address against more southerly options in Mayfair or St James's should weigh the transit convenience of the Regent Street corridor against the prestige of those postcodes. For a different pace entirely, UK alternatives such as Lime Wood in Lyndhurst, The Newt in Somerset, or Estelle Manor in North Leigh offer a different register altogether. For Scotland, Gleneagles and The Rutland in Edinburgh set different expectations around service weight and landscape access. Internationally, the category gap between Treehouse and properties such as Badrutt's Palace Hotel in St. Moritz or Hôtel de Paris Monte-Carlo is significant; Treehouse is a considered urban stay, not a grand resort proposition.
A Quick Peer Check
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Treehouse Hotel LondonThis venue — the venue you are viewing | playful luxury boutique in a former BBC building | $$$$ | 4-Star | |
| Dorset Square Hotel, Firmdale Hotels | Regency townhouse with contemporary English boutique charm | $$$$ | 4-Star | Lisson Grove |
| Miiro Templeton Garden | Victorian terrace with contemporary garden extension | $$$$ | 4-Star | Earl's Court |
| Aman Spa | Contemporary Asian-inspired design juxtaposed with quintessentially British Victorian heritage | $$$$ | 4-Star | Mayfair |
| The Standard London | Contemporary luxury boutique hotel housed in a restored brutalist landmark with playful, graphic design principles and a social-first approach to hospitality. | $$$$ | 4-Star | Whitehall |
| The Waterside Inn | Classic French fine dining establishment positioned as a 'restaurant with rooms' rather than a traditional hotel; heritage property emphasizing gastronomic excellence over hospitality amenities. | $$$$ | 3-Star | Bray on Thames |
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Warm wooden panels and recycled materials create a nostalgic, whimsical treehouse atmosphere with playful details and natural light.

















