The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Britain’s worst hotel chain’s £20m profit

. . . and no, this isn’t one of them – it’s the 5-star pile bought by Britannia boss with his £240m personal fortune

- By Sarah Bridge

ITS hotels are the real-life Fawlty Towers, where guests complain of dirty rooms, broken toilets, and stained bedclothes and towels.

But the Britannia group – dubbed the worst hotel chain in Britain by consumer magazine Which? – has seen its operating profits soar to nearly £20million, according to its latest accounts.

Founder Alex Langsam, 79, has amassed an estimated £240million fortune since he founded the company 30 years ago. He lives in a sprawling ten-bedroom former hotel worth £3.4million in a leafy suburb of Cheshire.

The company’s remarkable financial performanc­e comes despite damning reviews by Britannia guests on ratings website TripAdviso­r.

A guest staying at one of the chain’s more expensive hotels – the Britannia Hampstead in North London – described the scene as ‘something out of a horror movie’. The room smelt of ‘stale smoke’, offered stained towels and sheets, and the toilet was broken.

The company’s branches in Manchester fared little better: ‘The hotel is very dated and in serious need of refurbishm­ent,’ wrote one last week about its city centre site.

Another person staying at the Britannia near the city’s airport advised travellers: ‘Do yourself a favour and either spend a bit more or sleep on a bench at the airport.’

An undercover Which? investigat­or sent to stay at a Britannia hotel found ‘an air of neglect’ to the ‘dated’ property, with stained carpets, a cracked sink and lumpy mattress.

Current prices for one person for an overnight stay midweek range from £100.50 in London’s Canary Wharf to £29.50 at the Grand Metropole in Blackpool.

In June this year the company was fined more than £265,000 for seven breaches of food safety and hygiene regulation at the Adelphi Hotel in Liverpool – once one of the city’s most prestigiou­s addresses. Kitchen inspectors found live cockroache­s, and mice and rat droppings.

City councillor Steve Munby called the establishm­ent ‘an embarrassm­ent’ and added that ‘the way the Adelphi is run at the moment would make Fawlty Towers look like a fivestar hotel’.

Previously, Britannia was fined £18,000 for food hygiene offences at its Coventry hotel and £200,000 in 2013 for putting guests at risk of asbestos exposure in Folkestone.

Britannia directors claim that the group offers ‘increasing levels of comfort and service while maintainin­g its highly competitiv­e prices and reputation for good value’.

The company has received undisclose­d sums from the Government to house refugees and asylum seekers. Many guests complained after realising they were sharing their holiday hotel with migrants. The Red Cross said hotel accommodat­ion was ‘inappropri­ate’ in these cases.

A Britannia spokesman called the Which? survey ‘fundamenta­lly flawed’. ‘We have a wide range of hotels, all of which offer customers excellent value for money,’ he said.

 ??  ?? LIFE OF LUXURY: Alex Langsam and his £3.4 million home, far left
LIFE OF LUXURY: Alex Langsam and his £3.4 million home, far left

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