On this site stood the Barley Mow until 1886, when the pub was rebuilt and renamed the Brook Green, just two years prior to its purchase by Young's. The word “Hotel” was appended when the letting rooms were added.
The bar is spacious, high-ceilinged and airy, with big windows looking across Brook Green and down Shepherds Bush Road from the imposing corner site. Its decor and furnishing are a comfortable blend of Victoriana and modernity. At one end is a grand fireplace (complete with a log fire in the season) sporting a mirrored overmantle; at the other some stripped brickwork. In between is a long bar counter with an attractive mirrored mahogany back bar. Furniture consists of leather-style banquettes and upholstered chairs and stools at both high and low tables, together with some leather settees.
Breakfast available from 7am on weekdays and 8am at weekends and food service, with enticing menu items at reasonable prices, continues throughout the day. But note that the licence here does not permit alcohol sale to the public until 10am.
There is a separate basement cocktail bar, Smith's, offering only bottle beers, and 17 ensuite hotel rooms on the floors above.
One star - A pub interior of special national historic interest
Listed status: Not listed
A substantial Victorian pub with an elaborate bar-back.
Rebuilt in 1886, this grandiose four-storey building has a commanding position overlooking the eponymous green and the now-culverted brook is said to run beneath the pub. External flourishes include, at the first floor, the name of the pub attractively engraved in stone and, at attic level, a stone balustrade and urn-shaped finials.
Like so many pubs of its day, it doubled as a hotel and, indeed, still has good-quality letting bedrooms. Internally the pub has been considerably remodelled and opened out (the four external doors would have led to separate areas) but it still retains one outstanding feature – an impressive mirrored bar-back with three gablets each above a Renaissance-style carved face.
Other features to look out for are the impressive Classical-style fireplace on the right (with ornate wooden surround and flecked white marble inset), two stained glass panels (left-hand-side) depicting kings (one is evidently David, identified by his harp) and attractive cornices in the ceiling.
An imposing landmark pub, rebuilt in 1886, on the road from Hammersmith to Shepherd’s Bush. With three storeys (plus attic) it overlooks the eponymous green while the now-culverted brook is said to run beneath the pub. The ground floor is of stone with red brick above and on the first floor ‘Brook Green Hotel’ in stone relief with the wording picked out in black on white. Like so many pubs of its day, it doubled as a hotel and, indeed, still has good-quality letting bedrooms. Unsurprisingly, it has been considerably remodelled internally and opened out (the four external doors would have led to separate areas) but it still retains one star feature – an impressive mirrored bar-back with three gablets each above a Renaissance-style grotesque mask (mirroring one on an external panel).
Other features to look out for are the impressive Classical-style fireplace on the right (with flecked white marble inset), two stained glass panels (left-hand-side) depicting kings (one is evidently David, identified by his harp), and attractive cornices in the ceiling. The bar counter looks old and has recently been painted a claret colour. Modern alterations and partition removal leave us with a few puzzles: what is the meaning of the lower ceiling on the left, apparently with metal panels, and how does the varying ceiling cornice treatment relate to the original arrangements? The rear right-hand area is quite plain and its bar back fitting (left) seems entirely new.
This Pub serves no changing beers and 1 regular beer.
Brook Green Hotel, Hammersmith