Australian hotel group TFE Hotels has entered the UK market for the first time, opening two Adina-branded aparthotels in Cambridge and Glasgow within a fortnight of each other in late 2025. The move marks the beginning of what the Sydney-headquartered group has described as a long-planned expansion into one of Europe’s most competitive hospitality markets.
The Hobson Cambridge by Adina opened on 24 November 2025, followed by The Wellington Glasgow by Adina on 8 December. Together, they add 154 keys to TFE’s European portfolio and establish a foothold the group has been building toward for several years.
Two heritage buildings, one brand philosophy
Both properties follow a model Adina has applied across its European estate for more than two decades: repurposing historic buildings in city centres into design-led, apartment-style accommodation aimed at independent travellers who want more than a standard hotel room.
The Hobson Cambridge occupies Grade II listed Hobson House on St Andrew’s Street – originally the stables of 17th-century businessman Thomas Hobson, whose name inspired the phrase “Hobson’s Choice,” and later home to Cambridge’s police and fire station. The 56-key property has been meticulously restored, preserving vaulted ceilings, timber beams and period detailing while introducing modern kitchenettes and open-plan living spaces. A restaurant and bar named Oz & Isle – a nod to TFE’s Australian origins – sits within the glass-roofed courtyard.
The Wellington Glasgow transforms the 19th-century Wellington House on Wellington Street, just off George Square, into a 98-key aparthotel. Studio rooms and studio premier rooms each feature stylish kitchenettes, in-room steamers and coffee machines alongside a gym, flexible meeting space and a café bar. The design draws explicitly on Glasgow’s sandstone architectural heritage.
A strategic entry, not a one-off
TFE Hotels operates approximately 100 hotels across Australasia, the Far East and Europe under seven brands, including A by Adina, Vibe Hotels, Quincy Hotels, Travelodge Hotels, Rendezvous Hotels and Collection by TFE Hotels. The Adina brand itself launched in Europe nearly 30 years ago, opening its first property in Budapest in 1998. It now operates across Germany, Austria, Denmark, Switzerland and Hungary.
CEO Antony Ritch has framed the UK entry as a natural extension of that European base rather than a speculative push into new territory. The group has established a UK country office headed by Asli Kutlucan, CEO of TFE Hotels Europe, and appointed London-based Andrew Hunter as Chief Investment Officer – structural commitments that signal an intention to grow beyond the initial two properties.
“Europe is a real platform for growth for us as an organisation,” Ritch said, “and Cambridge and Glasgow are the ideal launchpads for our UK presence, offering strong demand across both leisure and corporate travel sectors.”
Hunter has pointed to the UK’s role in serving long-haul travellers from Asia-Pacific and North America, as well as intra-European guests – markets TFE is already positioned to convert through its existing international network.
The aparthotel question
TFE has been candid about where the aparthotel sits in the wider hospitality landscape. Speaking to Propel following the UK launch, the company stated that the model will never replace hotels, but characterised it as “a big part of the future” for the sector – a measured position that reflects both the format’s genuine momentum and its structural limitations.
It is a distinction worth noting. The Adina model – studio-style rooms with kitchenettes, flexible check-in, apartment-like independence – appeals most strongly to extended-stay corporate travellers, families and guests who want the autonomy of self-catering without sacrificing location or design quality. It does not displace the full-service hotel for every occasion. What it does is occupy a segment that conventional hotels have historically served poorly.
The UK is a market where that gap has become increasingly visible. Demand for extended-stay accommodation has grown across major cities, driven by project-based corporate travel, a sustained flow of international academic visitors and a growing cohort of domestic travellers who prioritise space and flexibility over loyalty points. Cambridge and Glasgow – a world-class university city and Scotland’s commercial capital – sit squarely in that demand profile.
A platform, not a conclusion
TFE is building broader momentum across its portfolio. A dual-branded Melbourne project including an Adina aparthotel is due to open in 2027, and a new Adina Chermside Brisbane is expected in mid-2026. The group’s Collection brand is also expanding, with the Hannah St Hotel Melbourne joining the portfolio later this year.
For the UK, the two opening properties are explicitly described as a launchpad. Further signings have not been announced, but the establishment of a full country office and investment leadership in London suggests the pipeline conversation is already under way.




