,
Kent Opening by Trusthouse Forte In the early 1970s,
Charles Forte imported the Travelodge brand from the United States with the hope of establishing it in the UK. The first Travelodge locations opened in 1973 in former Excelsior Motor Lodge branches, a brand of motels owned by Forte which were located near busy roads. In 1976,
Trusthouse Forte would open Little Chef Lodges; these were attached to
Little Chef restaurants and the first chain of budget hotels in the UK. In 1988, the two chains were combined and rebranded to become "Forte Travelodge".
Granada ownership In 1995, Travelodge was bought by
Granada, when the
Forte Group (formerly Trusthouse Forte) underwent a
hostile takeover. Granada decided to open Travelodges away from the roadside, with the first urban Travelodge opening in 1997. In 2001, Granada merged and then de-merged with
Compass Group, where their hospitality interests were transferred to Compass.
Sale to Permira In February 2003, Travelodge and Little Chef were sold to
Permira, who created the
special-purpose entity, TLLC Group Holdings Ltd and moved Travelodge's headquarters from
Toddington in
Bedfordshire to
Thame in
Oxfordshire in June 2003. In 2004, it bought the Moat House hotel on Drury Lane for £11m, and the 'London Farringdon' and 'London Islington' Thistle hotels. In July of that year, it decided to sell 136 of its hotels for £400m, then lease them back. In October 2005, Permira sold Little Chef to The People's Restaurant Group for £52 million, whilst retaining Travelodge.
Purchase by Dubai International Capital In August 2006, Travelodge was sold to
Dubai International Capital (DIC), a United Arab Emirates-based company, for £675 million. In mid-2010, Travelodge bought 52
Innkeeper's Lodge properties from the
Mitchells & Butlers pub chain, leaving less than half the original number of Innkeeper's Lodge hotels. In 2011, Travelodge announced a tie-up with British supermarket
Waitrose to develop three joint sites in the UK.
Financial restructuring in 2012 In February 2012, DIC had to prepare a bailout package due to a large debt of £17.5 million that was added to Travelodge's balance sheet following its purchase; despite significant earnings since 2006, these could not cover the debt repayments and the company recorded a debt of £517m in 2011. The company's ownership passed to New York-based hedge funds
GoldenTree Asset Management and
Avenue Capital Group, as well as Goldman Sachs. On 17 August 2012 Travelodge UK confirmed that the financial restructuring would be through a
company voluntary arrangement which would include: • At least £75m of new money being injected into the company. • £55m being invested into a major refurbishment programme across the estate, covering over 11,000 rooms and 175 hotels. The refurbishment programme was due to start in early 2013 and continue through to summer 2014. • Bank debt of £235m will be written off and £71m repaid, reducing total bank debt from £635m to £329m. However, Travelodge also stated that it was no longer viable to operate 49 hotels (8% of the estate), for which the company would now seek new operators. Hotels transferred to other hotel operators include Edinburgh Belford transferred to
Britannia Hotels, Blackpool transferred to
Ibis, Huddersfield, Liphook and Walsall transferred to
Metro Inns, and Bolton Services, Eastbourne, Edinburgh Haymarket, Manchester Airport, Manchester Worsley and Wentbridge transferred to independent operators. Travelodge's hotels in Coventry and Sutton Scotney (North and South) were closed. Travelodge UK also operate eleven hotels in Ireland and five in Spain. In late 2023, they also a new contactless hotel in St Albans. == Description ==