Miiro Templeton Garden
When you book Miiro Templeton Garden in London, England through our Enhanced Rates partnership, your stay includes daily breakfast, room upgrades and a hotel credit.
Exclusive Booking Perks
- Free breakfast
- £30 F&B credit per stay
- Upgrade to next room category subject to availability
Location
Earl's Court sits at the crossroads of several distinguished West London neighbourhoods, bordered by the ancient tracks of the West London line that once divided it from Fulham. The district carries the memory of its former Exhibition Centre, a pre-war concert venue that drew crowds until 2014, but the streets today speak more quietly of residential Kensington life. Victorian terraces line tree-shaded roads where cafés spill onto pavements and corner pubs anchor quiet squares.
The property stands near where South Kensington's museum quarter transitions into Chelsea's leafy elegance. Notting Hill's markets and pastel-coloured townhouses lie two kilometres north, while the Thames curves southward through Chelsea. The Royal Borough pulses with cultural weight: the Palace of Westminster rises five kilometres east along the river, Kew's botanical collections spread across their historic landscape seven kilometres west.
London Heathrow connects to Earl's Court via the District line in under an hour, while London City Airport sits seventeen kilometres east across the capital. The Underground stitches West London together with efficient frequency, though walking reveals more: the neighbourhood rewards those who explore on foot, ducking into mews lanes and garden squares that never quite announce themselves.
Pippin's anchors the property with Modern British cooking that feels neighbourhood-intimate despite the hotel setting, its large garden ideal for warm-weather dining when London's rare summer evenings stretch long and golden. The kitchen leans into seasonal British produce with enthusiasm. Two three-Michelin-starred restaurants sit within three kilometres: CORE by Clare Smyth in Notting Hill pairs tasting menus with a Whiskey & Seaweed bar that deserves its own visit, while Restaurant Gordon Ramsay in Chelsea maintains the exacting French standards that built the chef's reputation beyond the television screen. Book either weeks ahead.
Portobello Market sprawls 2.7 kilometres north every Saturday, its antiques stalls and vintage clothing racks drawing crowds that thin as you walk toward Golborne Road's quieter food vendors. The Notting Hill Farmers' Market, 1.8 kilometres away, brings organic producers to a car park each Saturday morning. Kew's glasshouses and historic landscape gardens reward a morning, while the Palace of Westminster and Westminster Abbey form London's gothic heart five kilometres east. The Ecology Centre sits just over a kilometre away for those seeking green respite closer to hand. Don't miss the Thursday and Friday markets in Shepherd's Bush, where West London's diversity shows itself in jerk chicken stalls and Kurdish bakeries.
Winter settles over London with short grey days and temperatures hovering just above freezing, the city's famously damp cold seeping through layers. January and February see highs barely reaching eight degrees, though indoor museums and theatre seasons offer rich compensation. Spring arrives tentatively in March and April, when temperatures climb into the low teens and sudden sunshine draws crowds to the parks.
May through September delivers London's finest weather, with July and August peaking near twenty-two degrees and long twilights stretching past nine o'clock. These months see the least rain, though showers remain possible. Book well ahead for summer, when the city competes for hotel inventory.
October cools quickly, autumn's rust-coloured light filtering through plane trees as temperatures drop back to the mid-teens. November and December bring the year's heaviest rainfall and a return to single-digit temperatures, the city dressing itself in Christmas lights to brighten the early darkness.
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