No. I was going to suggest some alternative powered speakers that sound as good as £200-£250 Hi-Fi, but they have a large footprint due to their unconventional shape (they're pyramids) so need quite a bit of space. They're probably too big for the space you have available.
If you're buying new from regular shop/online stock then there's always a price vs performance trade off. £100 gets you away from the 'toy' products which is good, but you're still in budget territory. However, you do start to find the use of better materials and higher quality components so things are at least heading in the right direction. Most everything is made in China (no surprises there) but one crucial question is whether the product is a Western design which is then sub-contracted for manufacture, or if it's a pure Chinese design/build that's tipped out of a faceless factory that made toasters yesterday, speakers today, and phone chargers tomorrow. There's a lot of product sloshing about that's simply bought in, badged up and then sold out the door without the reseller having anything much to do with it.
Rokit (by KRK Systems) and Alesis can both trace their histories back to music production, so there's some heritage in the business centered on quality rather than just price, and that's a good thing. It's not quite the same as saying these specific products are the last word in studio performance, but one would hope that the Alesis speakers are at least designed to uphold the brand values and encourage buyers to look at Alesis again come upgrade time. On that basis then the Alesis speakers might be a decent punt.
The other way to get better performance within a set budget is to look at the Used market. There are two dock products that stand out to me as worthy of investigation: B&W's Zeppelin Mini and ARCAM's rCube. The Zeppelin Mini was £300 at launch back in 2010. Since then we've had a major change in Apple to the lightening connector, so if you have recent product then I think you'd have to fall back on to the set's 3.5mm input instead. This perhaps indicates why Minis now change hands for around £60-£70 used. If the connectivity isn't an issue then that's a bit of a bargain for the performance. You'd be unlikely to find anything much better new under £200.
It's a similar story with the ARCAM rCube though the pricing is slightly different. rCube launched at £499 originally. In 2011 there was a price cut to £350. The rCube also includes an internal rechargeable battery meaning you could take it in to the garden or somewhere without mains. Used examples sell for around £100-£120.