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Casino Curzon Street London

London's casinos are considered some of the finest in the world, luring the rich, and the incredibly rich, to their tables. These are seven of the best

  • 1963 Captain Leo Ponte who later married Lady Jennifer Curzon owned The River Club on The Embankment in London where gambling took place, “ Chemin de fer ” was often played. The River Club operated from the former headquarters of Sir Oswald Moseley’s “ Blackshirts – British Union of Fascists “.
  • The London Hilton on Park Lane is a British icon with fantastic rooms and luxurious suites. The Intercontinental London Park Lane isn't just close to Buckingham Palace, you'll also feel like a king.
Casino Curzon Street London

“‘Every night at the casino beautiful women used to try and catch my eye!’

Sep 02, 2016 The History of Curzon Street Starting life simply as ‘Mayfair Row’, Curzon Street is now one of Mayfair’s most famous addresses. Famous inhabitants of Curzon Street have included Member of Parliament George Selwyn in 1776, Prince Pierre Soltykoff and Earl Percy, the art collector Edward Solly at no. 7, 1821–44, Benjamin Disraeli until.

‘Presumably they thought you were a waiter, sir.’”

Jeeves had a point. Casinos have been attracting the foolish and luckless for hundreds of years now. Everyone knows the rule – ‘the house always wins’ – but still they come. Why? Because there is something inherently both thrilling and glamorous about these places.

While it may appear to be a riskless endeavour when your bank balance has eight digits to it, gaming clubs have persuaded more than a few millionaires to part with their fortunes.

And this is especially true in London, which contains some of the most seductive of them, where your eyes will be dazzled by glamour and your shoulders will rub with the highest of high rollers.

The best casinos in London

Maxim’s Casino

Originally constructed in 1862 for John Forster - a celebrated critic of the age and close friend to Charles Dickens – Maxims at No 1 Palace Gate House was “built for a gentleman by gentlemen”.

You cannot deny the place oozes class, with intimate gaming areas that are spread across two floors. The main Gaming Room is housed in what used to be the Drawing Room, complete with marble fireplaces and pearwood panelling along with several other private gaming rooms including the glorious glass-roofed Library. Yet it’s not all Ye Olde Cards: Maxims has introduced a brand new Electronic Gaming experience with slots and electronic roulette from December 2019.

Maxims is open 24 hours a day, all year round, apart from Christmas Day, with a late food and beverage licence. The restaurant specialises in Arabic, Chinese and European cuisine along with a lounge bar serving an extensive array of premium wines and rare whisky from around the world.

1a Palace Gates Rd, Palace Gate, South Kensington, W8 5LS; maximsclub.com

The Ritz Club

There is nothing understated about the Ritz Club. Strolling around its gilded opulence, it’s no surprise that the place has attracted some of the most famous patrons over the years. It is all glinting gold leaf, gleaming mirrors and a carpet which bears the tread of a thousand beautiful pairs of loafers and heart-piercing heels. The casino opened in 1978 from the unused ashes of what was the hotel’s ballroom and grillroom. Its decor was inspired by the Amber Room in the Summer Palace in St Petersburg.

You can smell the high stakes in the air – particularly in the spectacular super salle privee where at night millions will be flying onto tables. The casino benefits from being attached to the hotel so that members can stroll down having gorged on a five-star meal. But you can also order fish and chips wrapped in newspaper or Fosters beer and Mr Kipling cakes as Australian tycoon Kerry Packer used to. “Eccentricity is very much part of the flavour of our business,” says Roger Marris, the club’s CEO, who has seen it all.

Among the eccentrics that come to the club are Johnny Depp, Al Pacino, Albert of Monaco, Tony Blair and Bill Clinton. Maximum bets are £250,000 and the club will see £10m to £15m action on any night. Players at the Ritz have won £10m in one session. And lost the same.

150 Piccadilly, W1J 9BT; theritzclub.com

Aspinall's

While the Ritz is grandiose, Aspinall’s is prestigious. For many, it is the most exclusive and elegant of all Mayfair casinos. The discreet exterior blends into what looks like a residential street, but the interior is incredibly lush and exclusive, with an air of rumpled tuxedoes and expensive cigars rolling the dice under chandeliers and silks and velvets. Come on an evening and you’ll feel the walls thumping with the adrenaline of sweat-browed Oofys throwing life-changing bets onto the blue baize.

Aspinall’s heyday was in the 1970s, with the regular presence of men such as James Goldsmith, the Sultan of Brunei, Tiny Rowland and Adnan Khashoggi. The place maintains an air of discretion but stories do seep out. For example, there’s one memorable evening when a punter won £12m, a win which required the owners to seek refinancing.

27-28 Curzon Street, W1J 7TJ; crownlondonaspinalls.com

LES AMBASSADEURS

Remember the scene in Dr No when Sean Connery appears with inimitable suaveness, lights a Morland cigarette on the baccarat table, and introduces himself to the world with the superbly nondescript line: “Bond. James Bond”? That is set in ‘Les A’. The place was called Le Cercle back then and it is to casinos what Aston Martin is to cars – slick, elegant and refined and probably with the odd Bond sitting inside. The grand Georgian building was owned by Leopold de Rothschild who lived there in 1879. Membership is £1,000 and the views across Hyde Park are breathtaking.

Bond aside, the place has attracted its share of modern-day Blofelds. Philip Green has been a regular at Les Ambassadeurs in the past, reportedly winning (and losing) millions in a night. Mike Ashley has attended, though not gambled. Caitlyn Jenner, Teddy Sheringham and Nicklas Bendtner also make up the alumni.

5 Hamilton Place, W1J 7ED; lesambassadeurs.com

CROCKFORDS

Curzon

The private suites at Crockfords are stocked with free Krug champagne, caviar and lobster. The casino is based on the gaming club established in 1828 by William Crockford a few streets away in St James’s. The son of a fishmonger, Crockford raised gambling from the cobbles of the East End to an elite activity in Mayfair where it could net a more aristocratic fish. The Duke of Wellington was a member.

It is from the existing club that the modern day casino was opened in a suave white Georgian mansion on Curzon Street where you play under imposing ceilings and chandeliers. High rollers come in their droves to gamble at what is effectively the oldest of them all. Not least was Kerry Packer who spent time here and is said to have one lost £11m in a three-week spree in 1999.

30 Curzon Street, W1J 7TJ; crockfords.com

The London Hippodrome

The London Hippodrome opened as a musical hall in 1900, with a young Charlie Chaplin starring in the first show performed at the venue. It was later transformed into a nightclub called The Talk of the Town, which hosted a Who’s Who of 20th century musical legends: Frank Sinatra, The Jackson 5, Judy Garland and Ella Fitzgerald are just a fraction of the names who played there. Subsequent owners included Peter Stringfellow, before the lease was acquired in 2009 by Jimmy and Simon Thomas, who opened the casino in 2012.

Such is the size of the casino, it technically houses three separate casinos over its five floors. The ground-floor Grand Casino is very much the centrepiece, a giant goldfish bowl of gambling; Lola’s on the lower-ground floor is like a buzzy speakeasy; and The Craybourn Club on floor three is a more relaxed environment – plus it’s next to the smoking terrace.

Want to take a break for the tables? The 325-seat theatre hosts Magic Mike Live, the stage version of Channing Tatum’s two-film franchise; expect plenty of moves and minimal clothing. Meanwhile the Heliot Steak House is one of London’s finest, and a more than worthy way to start spending your winnings.

Cranbourn St, Leicester Square, WC2H 7JH; hippodromecasino.com

Casino

The Empire Casino

Las Vegas by way of Leicester Square. The Empire is very much the Manchester United of London casinos; it’s the Coca Cola of London casinos, the MCU of London casinos. An unashamedly populist behemoth that caters to everyone from the high rollers to students looking to spin a cheeky £20.

At 55,000 square feet, The Empire is the largest casino in London, so it must be doing something right. The venue was formerly a ballroom and a theatre – classy – but was transformed into a casino in 2007 by the mighty Caesars Entertainment. The result is the type of palace that would not look out of place on the Strip. There are 127 slot machines and 50 table games: that’s a lot of gambling.

Take a break from the action at one of the four bars – Carlsberg Sports Bar, Icon Balcony Bar, The Shadow Bar, and Vapor – or the Pan Asian restaurant FuLuShou. The VIP Dragon Lounge is very much a club-within-a-club: players are treated like royalty (often because they are) and the stakes can induce nosebleeds.

5-6 Leicester Square, WC2H 7NA; thecasinolsq.com

It would be grossly unfair to call London a 'city' in the same way that you’d use that word for the likes of Liverpool or Southampton. London isn’t just a city, it’s a sprawling metropolis, filled with boroughs, which have each got their own small towns and suburbs that are about the same size on their own as some of the smaller cities throughout the UK. It’s hardly surprising, therefore, that the capital is home to plenty of casinos that have their own personality and offer differing facilities.

Map of London Casinos

312 The Loft, Westfield Stratford City, Montfichet Road, Olympic Park, London, E20 1ET
27-28 Curzon Street, London, W1J 7TJ
30 Curzon Street, Mayfair, London, W1J 7TN
1 Baker Street, London, W1U 8ED
61-66 Russell Square, London , WC1B 5JS
3-4 Coventry Street, London, W1D 6BL
262 Tottenham Court Road, London , W1T 7RG
London
5 Hamilton Place, London, W1J 7ED
Palace Gate House, 1a Palace Gate, Kensington, London, W8 5LS
Queens House, Leicester Square, London, WC2H 7RN
14 Old Park Lane, Mayfair, London, W1K 1ND
5-6 Leicester Square, London, WC2H 7NA
24 Hertford St, London, W1J 7SA
4-18 Harrington Gardens, London, SW7 4LJ
Cranbourn Street, Leicester Square, London, WC2H 7JH
45 Cromwell Road, South Kensington, London, SW7 2EF
30 Berkeley Street, Mayfair, London, W1J 8EH
101 Knightsbridge, London, SW1X 7RQ
150 Piccadilly, London, W1J 9BS

Curzon Street London Map

Old Quebec Street, London, W1H 7AF
150-162 Edgware Road, London, W2 2DT

Due to the size of the city and sheer number of casinos, it wouldn't be fesible (or helpful) to give you a blow-by-blow breakdown of every casino in London. So instead, we'll give you some advice in the broadest possible terms. If you’re someone who likes the glitz and the glamour, for example, then you’ll probably fancy heading somewhere the Ritz Casino Club in Piccadilly, so named because the casino floor itself is located in the old ballroom of the Ritz Hotel. Alternatively, you might want to have a look at the London Playboy Club, although be aware you can only enter if you’re a member or you’re with a member. The waitresses are dressed as, you guessed it, Playboy bunnies and high-stakes betting is positively encouraged.

Fear not, though, not every casino in London is for the glitterati. There are countless 'normal' casinos where the order of the day is fun and trying your hand at different things to see how you get on. The Aspers Casino at Westfield Shopping Centre in Stratford will interest you if that’s your bag. Another great classic casino is the Empire Casino, Leicester Square. More than a few well-known tournaments have been held here over the years.

When it comes to the location of all of the casinos, there’s a decent spread throughout the city. Mayfair is where you’ll find the more 'high-end' venues, whilst there about half a dozen of the more 'normal' casinos located in between Piccadilly Circus and Leicester Square alone. Obviously, the Underground system in London is excellent, so you won’t have a problem getting from place to place.

Casino Curzon Street London England

Closed Casinos

Casino Curzon Street London Theatre

As with any big town with great real estate, gaming venues in London are bound to chop and change every now and again. Some of the ones we've noticed disappear in the last couple of years are the Golden Nugget on Shaftesbury Avenue and its neighbour on the same street the Fox Poker Club, which are now both permanently closed. Another that has closed its doors is the Connoisseur Club within the Royal Garden Hotel along Kensington High Street in West London.