Take a look around the brand new hotels Thomas Cook customers will never get to stay in – MyLondon

Last week saw thousands of holidaymakers stranded abroad when tour operator Thomas Cook went into liquidation.

A huge repatriation programme is still ongoing to bring people home but it's not just the company's customers who have been hit.

Thomas Cook owned a worldwide collection of hotel brands and resorts including Sentido, Sunwing, Sunprime and Smartline.

The latest hotel brand to open under the same umbrella was Cook's Club, a design-led but affordable hotel group aimed at the millennial generation, reports the MEN.

Recognising a change in appetites among young people, Thomas Cook retired its Club 18-30 brand late last year and switched the focus from hedonism to health.

Gone are fishbowl cocktails and all-night parties, replaced with vegetable smoothies and properly crafted drinks.

Hotel spaces are designed to be as beautiful, and as Instagram-friendly, as possible, down to the unicorn inflatables scattered across the surface of the swimming pools.

It was a huge overhaul and, on the surface of things, seemed to be successful.

The first to open in June 2018 was Cooks Club Hersonissos, on the Greek island of Crete, with seven new hotels opening under the brand in little more than a year.

Cook's Clubs can be found in Gambia, Turkey, Mallorca, Bulgaria, Greece and Egypt.

The latest was Cook's Club El Gouna, located on the water's edge of a luxurious man-made lagoon just north of Hurghada.

This hotel, on Egypt's Red Sea coast, only opened its doors in August, and only had its launch party two weeks ago - the Thomas Cook yellow heart above the door got to oversee that, but won't see the hotel filled with guests.

On a very recent trip to the hotel, I found an understated decor of brushed concrete, Bedouin-style floor cushions, palm trees and wooden decks.

The muted grey and brown colours chosen for the hotel contrasted sharply against the piercing blue of the swimming pool, and the murky blue-green of the lagoon beyond.

Grey sunbeds around the water's edge were as comfortable as real beds, with matching bean bag chairs scattered beneath the shade of umbrellas.

A variety of food stations, from wood-fired pizzas to fresh grilled meats to salads and burgers, were built into the 'Cantina' to feed guests on either a bed and breakfast or half-board basis.

Even the fitness facilities were gorgeous, dumbbells and benches carved from polished wood and presented beneath a bamboo canopy.

It's a real looker of a hotel, and as someone sitting nicely within the target demographic of 20 to 35 years old, the appeal was obvious.

With virtually round-the-clock DJs stationed at the poolside, it was common on my trip to see the young and beautiful people of Egypt (as well as holidaymakers mostly from Germany) draped over fruit-shaped inflatables sipping on Aperol spritzes.

A huge sign at the poolside had light-hearted messages such as: "Keep your fluids - in certain circumstances, the exchange of body fluids may be a good idea but... spit, snot and pee do not belong in the pool!"

El Gouna itself is a network of 36 twisting and interconnected islands, all made by hand only three decades ago by construction company Orascom.

The desert was carved away to entice the ocean in, and now the resort boasts three huge marinas, two golf courses, 11 spas and around 2600 hotel rooms - all under a blanket of year-round sunshine.

Tuk tuks crawl over the resort like colourful bugs, whisking visitors around for a mere 15 Egyptian pounds (around 1 sterling) per person per trip.

Popular restaurants include Morgan's Beach Restaurant, where all-you-can-eat seafood buffets showcase some of the best seafood in the region, and Captain's Inn Steak House, where dishes are presented sizzling.

Day trips to the uninhabited island of Mahmya, where pristine coral reefs are surrounded by dusty mountains, are plentiful and worthwhile.

Boats frequently make trips to 'Dolphin House' too, a patch of the Red Sea where dolphins swim alongside snorkellers and effortlessly overtake luxury yachts.

All of these trips and more were arranged easily and quickly in typical package holiday style by a Thomas Cook rep, popping up at the hotel in his sunny yellow uniform and speaking proudly of the 178-year-old company he worked for.

Due to open in El Gouna this November was Casa Cook, another Thomas Cook-owned hotel brand with a similar design aesthetic but an even more luxurious travel experience.

Though both properties in El Gouna will remain operational, bumpered from the liquidation by Orsascom, it's not certain who will save the other properties around the globe.

Cook's Club El Gouna and Casa Cook El Gouna will be renamed and franchised out to an alternative, yet-to-be-confirmed tour operator.

The arrival of these two brands gave Thomas Cook a 21st century update - though it appears to have been too little, too late to save the travel giant.

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Take a look around the brand new hotels Thomas Cook customers will never get to stay in - MyLondon

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