Hotels & Accommodations
The Daffodil Hotel Welcomes Andrew Mackay Back as GM in Lake District, UK- What You Need to Know

Thursday, July 24, 2025
The Daffodil Hotel & Spa in the Lake District, UK, has appointed Andrew Mackay as General Manager, a role he previously held a decade ago. An experienced hotelier who has overseen some of the UK’s leading properties, Mackay is ready to inject new life into the historic venue. His return is the start of an exciting new era for the hotel, particularly with a renewed emphasis on revitalising the wedding side of the hotel that at one time made it one of the most popular venues in the Lake District for couples wanting a romantic venue.
Mackay’s Experience and Leadership
Andrew Mackay has spent most of his working life in hotels. He has developed a successful career managing many of the UK’s top country house hotels throughout Cumbria and Yorkshire including The Devonshire Arms Hotel & Spa, Linthwaite House, The Samling and Swinton Park Estate. His vast experience and exceptional leadership skills are hoped to provide massive improvements to The Daffodil Hotel, already famed for its breathtaking lakeside views and high quality facilities.
Mackay expressed his excitement about returning to The Daffodil Hotel & Spa, stating that he was thrilled to be back. He shared that he had strong sentimental feelings for his previous time at the property and was excited to take the lead once again.
A Vision to Breathe New Life into Weddings at The Daffodil Hotel
Mackay’s overriding goal on his return is to reestablish The Daffodil Hotel as one of the go to wedding venues in the area. The hotel had gained a reputation over history as the top choice for couples wanting to get hitched surrounded by the Lake District’s scenic beauty throughout the years. With its romantic lakeside location, inspired architecture and restful ambience, the hotel seemed like the ideal location for weddings, but the offering had lost its luster in recent years.
Now, with Mackay at the helm The Daffodil Hotel is reaffirming its wedding services, including tailored plans for bigger parties, but without losing the personal touch. Now the hotel can host between a smaller 50 and 150 guests for the ceremony and 50 for the evening reception giving you the perfect venue for larger and smaller wedding parties.
Enhanced Services and Modern Touches
In addition to wedding relaunch, Mackay has driven change throughout all departments of the hotel in a bid to deliver unprecedented guest satisfaction. Guests will be treated to outstanding service if they’re there for a wedding, a spa relaxation or a family vacation.
Facilities The Daffodil Hotel features a variety of modern and relaxing facilities such as a lake-side terrace, a well-appointed spa with thermal pool, sauna, steam room and a selection of treatments with luxury Templespa products. Mackay will take the lead on continuing to grow these services, to ensure that all guests enjoy the best possible experience; whether it’s a relaxing break or an activity-packed adventure in the beautiful Lake District.
Mackay mentioned that the hotel already has a fantastic team in place and expressed excitement about enhancing the guest experience. He stated that whether guests are seeking a romantic getaway, a health retreat, or a family staycation, they can expect an unforgettable experience with exceptional hospitality.
A Lakeside Paradise in The heart of The Lake District
The Daffodil Hotel & Spa is close to the town of Ambleside, which boasts natural beauty and outdoor activities. The hotel enjoys some of the finest views in the Lake District; its lakeside location is a haven of tranquility and a gateway to some of the best scenery the Lake District has to offer. The hotel’s nestled gardens and calm grounds provide an ideal backdrop for those seeking seclusion from the fast-paced world.
Whether it’s for a cozy weekend break for two or a great friends spa day for the star of the show, we offer a variety of options with nothing but the fabulously captivating Lake Windermere as the view to accompany your stay. Under the direction of Andrew Mackay, the hotel is set to cement its status as one of the Lake District’s most inviting tourist destinations.
The future is bright for The Daffodil Hotel
Mackay’s reappointment also follows the expansion of Crerar Hotels, the group that The Daffodil Hotel is part of. With a further 10 properties throughout Scotland and the Lake District, Crerar Hotels has a collection of hotels that includes other well-established hotel name such as Loch Fyne Hotel & Spa, Fonab Castle and Balmoral Arms. The group was bought by Blantyre Capital Limited and Fairtree Hotel Investments in March 2023, signaling future enhancements and expansions throughout its portfolio.
Under Mackay, The Daffodil Hotel is set to be one of the highlight wedding venues nestled in the beautiful Lake District, UK. It’s a gorgeous property with fresh renovations, and coupled with Mackay’s talents, now is an exciting time for the hotel and it’s patrons.
Whether you’re planning a wedding, having a long overdue pamper or fancy a weekend away from it all, you will find a warm welcome here at The Daffodil Hotel & Spa in the heart of The Lake District.
Hotels & Accommodations
Anti-migrant protests continue at Epping hotel

Hundreds of protesters have gathered outside a hotel housing asylum seekers in Essex.
About 300 anti-migrant protesters are at the The Bell Hotel, Epping, according to BBC journalist James Bryant.
Some are waving St George’s flags while others have banners and signs with slogans including: “Protect our kids”.
Protests, including some violent clashes, began at the hotel on 13 July after a man living there was arrested and subsequently charged with sexual assault, harassment and inciting a girl to engage in sexual activity.
Hadush Kebatu, 41, from Ethiopia, has denied the offences and is in custody.
Police say 2,000 pro-immigration counter-protesters have been making their way to the hotel from the town’s station to a pen close to the anti-migrant protest.
Some are chanting “Say it loud, say it clear – refugees are welcome here”, and holding posters, banners and placards with slogans including “Unity is strength” and “Stand up to racism”.
They have been surrounded by police officers.
Meanwhile, some of the anti-migrant protesters have been singing along to patriotic music, including Rule, Britannia!.
Several police cars, including riot vans, have started to arrive in the area.
As well as Essex Police, officers from the Metropolitan, Durham, Kent, Surrey, Sussex, West Midlands, Leicestershire, Northamptonshire, Cheshire, Dyfed-Powys and Hampshire forces are at the scene.
The county force has put a dispersal order in place from 12:00 BST on Sunday to 08:00 on Monday, covering the town centre, transport hubs and networks.
This gives police the power to direct anyone suspected of committing anti-social behaviour, or planning to do so, to leave the area or face arrest.
Ten people have been charged with offences in relation to this month’s disorder in the town, with defendants due to appear at Chelmsford Crown Court on 18 August.
On Saturday, about 400 anti-immigration protesters and 150 counter-protesters gathered for a demonstration outside a hotel in the Norwich area.
Police said no arrests were made there.
Hotels & Accommodations
KOKO HOTEL and VALUE THE HOTEL Launch New Web Point Program

KOKO HOTEL and VALUE THE HOTEL have launched a new web point program starting July 1st.
The KOKO HOTELS “Web Point Program” offers a 10% discount on reservations made through the official website when members log in, on top of earning 3% of the usage amount (excluding tax) in points. Accumulated points can be used not only at KOKO HOTELS but also at group hotels such as HOTEL WING and TENZA HOTEL. Points can be redeemed at a rate of 1 point per yen when booking through the official website. Additionally, there are benefits such as a cash-back offer of 10,000 yen when 8,000 points are accumulated.
To commemorate the start of the new point program, a 10,000-point giveaway campaign will be conducted from July 1st to September 30th. 55 participants who register as members on the official website and make reservations and stay during the promotion period will be selected by lottery to receive 10,000 points.
Hotels & Accommodations
How Tokyo Is Becoming Sustainable

Tsubasa Yokote, representative director of Blueground Japan, in his Tokyo office.
Aren Elliott
In a wood-paneled boardroom with a commanding view of Tokyo’s Imperial Palace, Tsubasa Yokote is trying to explain the city’s approach to sustainable tourism. It’s not easy.
Yokote, representative director of Blueground Japan, says sustainability — best exemplified by the concept of mottainai, which emphasizes avoiding waste — has been part of Japanese society for centuries. Many of the tourism industry’s recent efforts to become more sustainable are a direct result of that cultural practice rather than a new movement spurred by climate change or politics.
You can see it in Blueground’s rental apartments. It’s in the recycling stations in the basements, which are standard in most Tokyo apartments. And it’s also in the efficiency features that allow you to regulate energy consumption in your home.
“All these features are beneficial for the environment,” he explains.
Blueground Japan, a collaboration with real estate developer Mitsubishi Estate, is a case study in mottainai. Each new apartment is designed with sustainability on several levels — not just in terms of saving energy but also of creating a sustainable business. The medium- and long-term housing market for furnished rentals is still developing, so when Yokote talks about sustainability, he is also talking about Blueground’s sustainability.
“Tokyo is upholding its high standard of sustainability, from its world-famous public transit system to dauntingly strict garbage sorting rules,” says Evelyn Gong, who teaches operations management at Carnegie Mellon University’s Tepper School of Business. She says the city is moving steadily towards its goal of achieving net zero emission by 2050, and its 2030 midway targets such as heightened renewable energy use and halved food waste.
The living room in a Blueground rental in Tokyo.
Blueground
How Tokyo’s tourism industry embraces mottainai
While Blueground Japan exemplifies sustainable urban living, Tokyo’s broader travel sector is weaving traditional mottainai values into innovative eco-practices. Here are a few examples of how hotels, restaurants, and cultural experiences are leading the charge:
Palace Hotel Tokyo’s circular economy
The hotel’s Eco-Palace initiative turns kitchen waste into fertilizer for local farms. The hotel then buys the resulting crops of rice and produce for incorporation into the staff canteen’s daily menu.
Kintsugi: The art of sustainable beauty
Many Tokyo luxury hotels, including the Palace, offer kintsugi workshops, where guests repair broken pottery with gold — a centuries-old practice that embodies mottainai. Couture designer Kevan Hall, inspired by a Tokyo workshop, noted, “It’s a poetic way to transform flaws into heritage.”
Carbon-neutral hotel stays
The Tokyo Station Hotel offsets 100 percent of guest stay emissions, while the Imperial Hotel Tokyo replaced plastic amenities with bamboo and wood. Both properties use CO₂-free electricity and hold top certificates in sustainable development.
Zero-waste dining
The Michelin-starred Daigo restaurant practices shojin-ryori, a Buddhist culinary tradition that minimizes waste. Chef Yusuke Nomura crafts plant-forward kaiseki menus using local ingredients, thereby reducing methane emissions.
Rebuilding communities
Walk Japan, a tour operator, partners with rural towns in places like earthquake-hit Noto Peninsula, where travelers help rebuild homes and revive abandoned rice paddies. Their tours funnel revenue into local economies, which are trying to counter population decline.
Eco-conscious lodging
Boutique projects like Nipponia Sawara repurpose historical warehouses into hotels using local materials. At Mt. Fuji’s Ecologic, guests join workshops and bike tours supporting nearby farms.
Sustainability as a lifestyle in Tokyo
One of the best ways of experiencing Tokyo’s sustainability is by living it. Blueground, which offers furnished apartment rentals in the city, is tapping into a new market of digital nomads and people who are relocating to Japan.
Yokote says Blueground’s apartments come with multilingual support to help customers make sense of Japan’s mottainai practices.
For many visitors, understanding sustainability in Tokyo means more than admiring eco-initiatives from afar — it means stepping into the rhythms of daily life. But Japan’s rental housing market often presents hurdles for non-Japanese residents, from stringent lease terms and language barriers to cultural nuances around waste management and energy use. Blueground’s furnished apartments aim to bridge this gap, says Yokote.
“That means access to housing designed with Japanese values — like minimalism and energy efficiency — while providing the tools to navigate systems that might otherwise feel inaccessible,” he says.
By embedding sustainability into the fabric of everyday living, Blueground’s apartments become gateways to Japan’s eco-conscious ethos. Guests learn to separate trash not as a performative act, but as a reflection of mottainai’s enduring influence. They interact with systems like energy-efficient appliances and water-saving fixtures, which are standard in Japanese homes but often unfamiliar to outsiders.
“When you live here, you start to see how sustainability isn’t a trend. It’s a mindset passed down through generations, and now it’s something visitors can truly inhabit,” says Yokote.
In Tokyo, looking to the past to create a sustainable future
Tokyo’s journey toward sustainability is not a race to reinvent itself, as it is in other tourism destinations. At its core lies mottainai, a philosophy that has long whispered the value of resourcefulness.
From Blueground Japan’s energy-efficient apartments, where global nomads navigate energy-saving systems and strict recycling protocols, to the Palace Hotel Tokyo’s closed-loop kitchens and the golden scars of kintsugi workshops, the city is trying to prove that sustainability thrives when it’s rooted in heritage.
These efforts are neither performative nor peripheral. They are pragmatic evolutions of tradition: Michelin-starred chefs reviving Buddhist culinary ethics to cut food waste, hotels offsetting emissions while preserving the elegance of a bygone era, and rural tours that transform travelers into stewards of revival. Even the challenges — deciphering trash-sorting rules or mastering apartment energy systems — underscore a deeper truth: Sustainability demands both systemic rigor and individual adaptation.
“We’re not just saving energy,” Yokote says. “We’re building a sustainable bridge.”
But Tokyo’s greatest lesson may be its quiet demonstration that the future of sustainability lies not in discarding the past, but maintaining and refining it — one repurposed warehouse, revived rice paddy, and thoughtfully sorted trash bag at a time. In a world grappling with climate urgency, that may be a lesson for other tourism destinations.
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