The reviewer's summary of his stay is that he felt "incidental" to Tigerlily's "hypercool". As the "hangout of choice for visiting celebs" it is "manically modish" and the lobby is "buzzing with party atmosphere".
The reception staff are "bright and breezy", one shows the reviewer to his room and "gives a tutorial" on how to operate the lights.
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The author informs us that the hotel opened in "June 2006" and that it is located "at the 'posh end' of George Street". According to the author the hotel is "indefatigably girly" with its "street-facing windows", which are "up-lit by pink neon at night". This impression is also because "an enormous disco ball rotates above the pink-carpeted stairwe
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The conversion of Edinburgh's finanical centre to a "lifestyle hub" and "party enclave" has been driven by the demands of "local" professionals looking for a "cool urban scene" rather than the Scottish roots of their parents. Tigerlily, in a converted townhouse in George Street, has followed that trend. With three floors of bedrooms furnished in "c
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A Grade-A listed townhouse in George Street has been "sensitively converted" into Edinburgh's "latest boutique" hotel. The author found her initial approach to the place "a little scary" as she was confronted by "shocking pink" bar stools, "rotating disco balls" and a "vivid red and pink carpeted staircase" in the "dazzling" Georgian Room. However,
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