Thistle Hotels
Private | |
Industry | Hospitality |
Founded | 1965 |
Headquarters | Uxbridge, England |
Area served | United Kingdom |
Key people |
Tim Scoble CEO Quek Leng Chan Chairman Steve Bailey CFO |
Revenue | £287m (2004) |
Parent | Guoman Hotel Management (UK) Limited |
Website |
www |
Thistle Hotels, run by glh., is a UK-based hotel company with a portfolio of 12 hotels,[1] operating in the three and four star sector.
History
It was set up by Scottish & Newcastle in 1965, to combine its own traditional legacy hotels with purpose built hotels. Mount Charlotte Investments bought thirty four Thistle hotels from S&N, and acquired the Thistle brand name for £645m in November 1989. Debt acquired from the transaction surrogated Mount Charlotte Investments with no choice but to be taken over by Brierley Investments of New Zealand for £664m in 1990.
The chain was the main shirt sponsor for Leeds United AFC from 1993 to 1996.
In 1997, the company floated on the Stock Exchange, to become Thistle Hotels plc, valued at £620m. In September 1998, it sold 30 provincial hotels to Grace Hotels (owned by the Lehman Brothers investment bank) for £62.7m, becoming managed by Peel Hotels. In July 1999, it sold the Charles Dickens Hotel in London to the Ryan Hotel Group for £20m. In June 2002, it initially sold 37 of its hotels to Orb Estates of Jersey for £598m, continuing to manage the properties, but the hotels are eventually sold to Atlantic Hotels for £700m and operated under the Thistle name. In June 2003, the company was bought for £627m by BIL International, a private equity company based in Singapore (but registered in Bermuda) owned by the Hong Leong Group and the majority shareholder since 1990. Thistle Hotels was delisted from the London Stock Exchange. In 2004, it opened its Cumberland Hotel in London after a £95 million renovation, which operated under the Guoman brand. In May 2005, it sold six hotels to the Topland Group under a leaseback deal for £185m.
It used to be based in The Calls in Leeds, then moved to Uxbridge.
In 2004, budget hotel company Travelodge bought two Thistle Hotels in London.
Thistle Hotels is currently undergoing a re-branding of £100 million in order to maintain consistency across the group.
Thistle Cardiff the Parc has now re-opened after being closed for 17 months due to fire and has been refurbished throughout.
In 2015 the managed part of the estate was sold by its owners CIT Holdings Ltd. glh. was unsuccessful in its bid,[2] meaning the majority of the provincial estate changed management, being run by Accor hotels.[3]
Management
The CEO was Tim Scoble until 2012, he was the CEO of Little Chef for two years from 2004-6.
Mike De Noma joined as the new CEO in 2012
Guoman brand
Thistle now operates five luxury hotels in London under this brand, namely the Tower Hotel, the Cumberland Hotel, the Charing Cross, the Royal Horseguards,the Grosvenor (formally Thistle Victoria)
In April 2009, after a £19 million refurbishment, The Royal Horseguards received official 5-star accreditation, and was the first hotel in the Guoman portfolio to receive this rating.
References
- ↑ http://www.thistle.com/. Missing or empty
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(help) - ↑ http://www.glhhotels.com/press/press-releases/glh-ceases-management-of-cit-estate/. Missing or empty
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(help) - ↑ http://www.headforpoints.com/2015/06/17/thistle-quietly-losing-more-than-half-its-hotels-on-july-31st/. Missing or empty
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External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Thistle Hotels. |
- Official website
- Guoman Hotels
- Review at DooYoo
- Two reviews of the Thistle Euston at Ciao!
- Thistle Cardiff damaged by an arson attack in December 2006
- Tourism downturn hits Thistle Hotels in 2002