Early years Hyde Park Court was constructed by businessman
Jabez Balfour and his associate, South London builder James William Hobbs, as an exclusive apartment block. It included 138 flats and a private gentleman's club, the Hyde Park Club. Construction began in February 1888 and portions of the building opened for residents in 1889. Design work was begun by architects Thomas Archer and Arthur Green, but they broke up their partnership in 1889, and work was completed by Archer and his new partner, Francis Hooper. Hyde Park Court was among the tallest buildings in London, and its construction proved controversial, with fears that it would cast a shadow on
The Serpentine lake in Hyde Park. In 1892, Balfour's company, the Liberator Building Society, suffered a disastrous financial collapse, known as "Black September", which also brought down Hobbs & Company and resulted in the two men being imprisoned for deceiving their investors. Hyde Park Court, partly occupied but still unfinished, was taken over by receivers and completed. In 1898, the building was sold out of receivership to Herbert Bennett, one of the directors of
Harrods. Bennett closed the Hyde Park Club in December 1901 and converted the building to a hotel over the following months.
César Ritz served as a consultant for the conversion, with design work done by his favored architects,
Charles Mewès and partner
Arthur Joseph Davis, who continued to oversee renovations at the hotel for many decades.
Hotel conversion The
Hyde Park Hotel opened in 1902, with 268 bedrooms. The building's north entrance, facing Hyde Park, was closed to the public, because
King George V did not permit any advertising signage to face the park. The Knightsbridge entrance remained the main public entrance, while the northern was reserved for the royal family. which renamed it the
Mandarin Oriental Hyde Park, London. In September 2016, another renovation began, designed by
Joyce Wang. As renovation work continued, the hotel was damaged in a fire on 6 June 2018, believed to have been caused by welding work, but no staff or guests were injured. Fire damage was mainly confined to the exterior courtyard area, with limited impact on the interiors. The hotel closed for six months as a result. ==Royal entrance==