Green Hotel
Mysore, Southern India
A beautifully converted palace, with homely rooms and elegant gardens, in the historic city-seat of the Mysore princes.
Green indeed: this hotel is both verdant, with long lawns and
flowerbeds, and environmentally-friendly, shunning modern machinery
and training ‘underprivileged’ locals for its staff.
But there is also some blue in its veins. The former
‘Chittaranjan Palace’ was built 100 years ago as the
summer palace for the Wadeyar princesses, and a regal
elegance lingers on today. Every room is sumptuous in its own way -
from the bargain travellers’ rooms in the garden
block up to the Princess Room (ideal for honeymooners)
and the 2-room Bollywood Suite.
That name harks back to the building’s period as a film
studio prior to its 1994 purchase by British charity-director
Hilary Blume. Keen to fill the gap between luxury hotels and budget
hostels, she worked with Indians to renovate the building, ensure
charitable ownership (all proceeds go to local causes), and train
slum-dwellers and widows into the most caring hotel staff you could
wish for. It’s an affordable privilege to stay here. And,
with Mysore’s palaces, parks and its silk trade on your
doorstep, it will make your friends green with envy.

Reviewed by Yasmin Boland
Last updated
01 August 2010
Highs
- The enormous, award-winning gardens, where breakfast and tea are served. The friendly and enthusiastic staff
- The vast yet intimate common areas (library, drawing room, verandas)
- The knowledge that profits go to charity!
Lows
- The power supply seemed very fragile - hurricane lamps at dinner seemed almost routine
- There is no pool
Not only is it run on ecological principles, it also donates all profits to charity...
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