The University Arms is a chic hotel blending Edwardian charm with modern flair, offering stylish rooms, top-notch service, and a prime Cambridge location.
"A historic hotel with modern comforts and views over Parker’s Piece common." - Aashna Gajra
"Did Grace Kelly have a sense of humor? If so, you might think of the gorgeously reinvented University Arms in Cambridge as the Grace Kelly of hotels. It’s got that same ravishing combination of fire and ice: the fire courtesy of whimsical interiors by wunderkind Martin Brudnizki; the ice applied with measured classical precision by architect John Simpson. But it’s also marvelously witty, warm, and fun. To those who remember the old dour, turreted Victorian pile that loomed over one side of Parker’s Piece, the common near the town center where the rules of soccer were formulated, the new place will seem all but unrecognizable. Though the rooms, particularly the larger ones overlooking the green, are terrific—respectful to the past without being beholden to it—it’s the public spaces on the ground floor that clinch it. The highlights among these are Tristan Welch’s sprawling, light-flooded contemporary-British restaurant Parker’s Tavern and the cozy, velvet-upholstered bar where you should absolutely order a whisky-heavy Sixth Man, sprinkled with salted-caramel dust, to be enjoyed in the adjoining library. Cambridge has been arguably the smartest town around since about 1209. A mere 800 years later, it has a hotel to match." - Ramsay Short
"Set the scene.Clatter clatter ding ding! Curses. Nearly bowled over by a cyclist. Ah, Cambridge. Always a bikers' town. But what's this pristine, creamy, be-columned building on the corner, which looks as though it has just landed, intact and unsullied, from the 18th century? Ah, yes. This would be the new University Arms, which is practically unrecognizable, from this particular point of view near the main entrance, from its previous incarnation. What’s the backstory?A looming, turreted feature of the landscape for more than a century, dominating one side of Parkers Piece, the windswept, mortar-board-flat common where the rules of soccer were drawn up. Tolerated rather than admired for much of its life, it has lately been transmogrified into something altogether marvelous and unexpected. It’s down to the unlikely alliance of arch classicist John Simpson (The Queen’s Gallery at Buckingham Palace; Gainsborough Bath Spa) and interiors whizz-kid Martin Brudzinski (almost every fantastic place you can think of in London, including the new Annabel’s and Sexy Fish); their distinctly different styles prove surprisingly complementary. What can we expect in our room?All are named after famous Cambridge alumni—in our case, Christopher Marlowe. It’s a glorious bedroom in a sort of perky Victorian style with a bathroom in one of the turrets and sweeping views across Parkers Piece. It’s the best of the lot (and do be aware that there is considerable variety among the 192 rooms in terms of size and outlook). How about the food and drink?Parker's Tavern is the name given to the ground-floor restaurant and the bar, both of which are utterly wonderful: spacious, opulent, bright and sunlit by day, rather louche atmospheric by night, warmly and elegantly decorated. Chef Tristan Welch delivers classic English comfort food with aplomb (he may even persuade you that spaghetti Bolognese was invented in Cambridge), and the cocktails in the bar are pure dynamite. Anything to say about the service?Slightly hit and miss, but more hit than miss. The restaurant and bar staff were absolutely on it, as was the team at the concierge desk. Any wrinkles have probably been ironed out since our early visit. Who comes here?Cambridge is a surprisingly diverse place these days. Nor is it just a student town: people come here to do business and see the sights as well as to tell their kids to stop drinking so much and start going to a few lectures every now and then. The University Arms should sweep them all up—out-of-towners, rubberneckers, townies, distraught parents, youngsters high on their new-found freedom. What’s the neighborhood scene like?The revamp has not merely restored the old joint to its former glory but taken it to entirely new heights. This particular bit of Cambridge, on Regent Street near Emmanuel College, is by no means the loveliest; but the spiffed-up hotel nudges it in the right direction and there is no disputing its convenience. Is there anything you'd change?Some of the staff uniforms. There’s a whiff of Sergeant Bilko about them. Anything we missed?The wonderful poster of Alec Guinness in The Man in the White Suit by the lifts. It encapsulates the joyous spirit of the whole place. Worth it—and why?Definitely. Style, charm, location, cocktails." - Steve King
"Did Grace Kelly have a sense of humor? If so, you might think of the gorgeously reinvented University Arms in Cambridge as the Grace Kelly of hotels. It’s got that same ravishing combination of fire and ice: the fire courtesy of whimsical interiors by wunderkind Martin Brudnizki; the ice applied with measured classical precision by architect John Simpson. But it’s also marvelously witty, warm, and fun. To those who remember the old dour, turreted Victorian pile that loomed over one side of Parker’s Piece, the common near the town center where the rules of soccer were formulated, the new place will seem all but unrecognizable. Though the rooms, particularly the larger ones overlooking the green, are terrific—respectful to the past without being beholden to it—it’s the public spaces on the ground floor that clinch it. The highlights among these are Tristan Welch’s sprawling, light-flooded contemporary-British restaurant Parker’s Tavern and the cozy, velvet-upholstered bar where you should absolutely order a whisky-heavy Sixth Man, sprinkled with salted-caramel dust, to be enjoyed in the adjoining library. Cambridge has been arguably the smartest town around since about 1209. A mere 800 years later, it has a hotel to match." - CNT Editors
"Cambridge now has a superb hotel to match. The University Arms, which opened last summer, is both an elegant homage to neoclassical style and a whole lot of fun, with book-filled suites that use famous Cambridge graduates as decorating motifs." - Travel + Leisure Editors