Restaurants British French Italian Greek

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Restaurants British French Italian Greek 11 6 RESTAURANTS BRITISH Freud 1. ODETTE’S Museum 130 Regents Park Road NW1 8XL Tel. 020 7586 8569 FRENCH TOP LOCAL ATTRACTIONS 2. BRADLEYS 25 Winchester Road 9 NW3 3NR Tel. 020 7722 3457 ENTERTAINMENT & SPORTS 3. L’ABSINTHE VENUES Hampstead Chalk 40 Chalcot Road Theatre Farm Roundhouse NW1 8LS Tel. 020 7843 4848 Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre Swiss ITALIAN Roundhouse 19 Camden CoƩage 18 4. VILLA BIANCA Lord's Cricket Ground 2 Market Jason’sJa Trip 1 Perrin’s Court, Hampstead //London NW3 1QS Tel. 020 7435 3131 Hampstead Theatre 5. J PIZZERIA AND CUCINA 17 WWaterbus 10 7 148 Regents Park Road PARKS & OUTDOOR ACTIVITIES 13 NW1 8XN Tel. 020 7586 9100 5 6. ARTIGIANO Regent's Park 12A Belsize Terrace Primrose Hill South 14 1 NW3 4AX Tel. 020 7794 4288 Primrose 16 15 Camden GREEK ZSL London Zoo Hampstead Hill Lock Camden 3 Town 7. LEMONIA Jason’s Trip - Canal Tours 89 Regents Park Road London Waterbus Company - Boat Trips NW1 8UY Tel. 020 7586 7454 CHINESE 8. ROYAL CHINA CLUB SHOPS & MARKETS 40-42 Baker Street Camden Market W1U 7AJ Tel. 020 7486 3898 9. CHINA GARDEN Camden Lock 5-6 New College Parade NW3 5EP Tel. 020 7722 9552 MUSEUMS & LANDMARKS The Jewish MALAYSIAN Museum Madame Tussauds 10. SINGAPORE GARDEN ZSL London 83 Fairfax Road Freud Museum Zoo NW6 4DY Tel. 020 7328 5314 The Jewish Museum Mornington INDIAN Crescent 11. HAZARA Abbey Road Studios & Crossing St. John’s 44 Belsize Lane Wood NW3 5AR Tel. 020 7433 1147 STEAKHOUSE FOR MORE ATTRACTIONS, 12. GAUCHO GRILL Abbey Road ACTIVITIES & EVENTS IN LONDON 64 Heath Street crossing Regent’s NW3 1DN Tel. 020 7431 8222 Visit London TimeOut Londonist Park VEGAN 13. MANNA 4 Eriskine Road NW3 3AJ Tel. 020 7722 8028 PUBS Lord’s Cricket Ground 14. THE QUEEN’S 49 Regents Park Road LONDON TRAVEL INFORMATION Open Air NW1 8XD Tel.020 7586 0408 Theatre 15. THE ENGINEER Transport for London 65 Gloucester Avenue NW1 8JH Tel. 020 74831890 16. PRINCESS OF WALES 22 Chalcot Road NW1 8LL Tel. 020 7722 0354 CAFES 17. ARABESQUE 23 Winchester Road NW3 3NR TEL.020 7041 9793 18. PRIMROSE EATERY London Marriott Hotel Regents Park 38 Primrose Hill Road Great Warren NW3 3AD Tel. 020 7483 3222 Street 128 King Henry’s Road, London NW3 3ST Portland Street T: +44 (0) 20 7722 7711 MARKET LondonMarriottRegentsPark.co.uk Madame Regent’s 19. SWISS COTTAGE FARMERS’ Park MARKET (every Wednesday) Tussauds Eton Avenue Find us on: NW3 3EP FFind usus onon BBakeraker Contains Ordnance Survey data © Crown copyright and database right 2014 Street .
Recommended publications
  • 5-DAY LONDON ITINERARY for First-Time Visitors DAY ONE DAY TWO
    5-DAY LONDON ITINERARY For First-Time Visitors DAY ONE DAY TWO St. Paul's Cathedral Hop On Hop Off Bus Tour St. Paul's Churchyard, London EC4M 8AD, UK FREE admission included in The London Pass FREE admission included in The London Pass Big Ben and Houses of Parliament Millennium Bridge Westminster, London SW1A 0AA, UK Thames Embankment, London SE1 9JE, UK London Bridge Experience Thames River Cruise 2-4 Tooley St, London SE1 2SY, UK FREE admission included in The London Pass FREE admission included in The London Pass Tate Modern Westminster Abbey Bankside, London SE1 9TG, UK 20 Deans Yd, Westminster, London SW1P 3PA Admission is always free FREE admission included in The London Pass Shakespeare's Globe Buckingham Palace 21 New Globe Walk, London SE1 9DT, UK Westminster, London SW1A 1AA, UK FREE admission included in The London Pass Borough Market 8 Southwark St, London SE1 1TL, UK DAY THREE DAY FOUR Tower of London Portobello Market in Notting Hill St Katharine's & Wapping, London EC3N 4AB, UK Portobello Road, London W11 1LA, UK FREE admission included in The London Pass Hyde Market Tower Bridge Exhibition Great for picnics or see the Winter Wonderland Tower Bridge Rd, London SE1 2UP, UK Leadenhall Market FREE admission included in The London Pass Gracechurch St, London EC3V 1LT, UK St. Dunsten in the East Marble Arch Dunstan's Hill, London EC3R 5DD, UK King's Cross / St. Pancras Station Monument Euston Rd, Kings Cross, London N1C 4QP, UK Fish St Hill, London EC3R 8AH, UK Victor & Albert Museum FREE admission included in The London Pass Cromwell Rd, Knightsbridge, London SW7 2RL Kensington Palace Admission is always free Kensington Gardens, London W8 4PX, UK National History Museum FREE admission included in The London Pass Cromwell Rd, Kensington, London SW7 5BD Admission is always free This guide may contain affiliate links © MINT NOTION | MINTNOTION.COM 5-DAY LONDON ITINERARY For First-Time Visitors DAY FIVE This London itinerary covers all the top attractions in the city for first-time visitors.
    [Show full text]
  • The Joys of Advertisements Istorians and Others Who Study Suschitzky’S Bookshop Libris at 38 Boundary in 1968
    VOLUME 15 NO.3 MARCH 2015 journal The Association of Jewish Refugees The joys of advertisements istorians and others who study Suschitzky’s bookshop Libris at 38 Boundary in 1968. Its second branch, just off Finchley patterns of consumption have long Road, a mecca for scholars and connoisseurs Road facing the side of what is now Waitrose been aware of the importance of of German books. Well known in its time was John Barnes, opened in 1956 and survived Hadvertisements as rich sources of material; the Blue Danube Club at 153 Finchley Road, into the 21st century. Gideon Reuveni of the Centre for German- where Peter Herz directed Continental-style Refugee businesses in this part of London Jewish Studies at the University of Sussex, for reviews until he returned to his native Vienna catered to their clients’ needs across the example, has published fascinating work on in 1953; the Blue Danube Club was itself board of everyday life. In the sphere of office the Jews of Germany as consumers in the pre- an offshoot of another Kleinkunstbühne, the equipment, A. Breuer of 43 Buckland Crescent Hitler era. As I have myself learnt a great deal small-stage cabaret theatre Das Laterndl (The specialised in the repair and maintenance of about the community of Jewish refugees from Lantern), which had been set up at 69 Eton typewriters, while Ernst Rosenthal of 92 Eton Nazism in Britain from the ads in the back Avenue by the wartime Austrian Centre. Place, Eton College Road, offered ‘photocopies issues of AJR Information, I was intrigued by The distinctively Continental atmosphere in the middle of Hampstead’.
    [Show full text]
  • Phil Cohen, Reading Room Only: Memoir of a Radical Bibliophile And
    Phil Cohen, Reading Room Only: Memoir of a Radical Bibliophile, hardback, 274 pages, Nottingham: Five Leaves, 2013. ISBN: 978-1907869785; £14.99. and Sophie Parkin, The Colony Room Club: A History of Bohemian Soho, 1948-2006, hardback, 265 pages, London: Palmtree Publishers, 2012. ISBN: 978-0957435407; £35. Reviewed by James Heartfield (Freelance, UK) The Literary London Journal, Volume 12 Number 1–2 (Spring/Autumn 2015) Bloomsbury and Soho in the nineteenth century were places where political refugees lived, though the Germans preferred Bloomsbury, just to the north, on the grounds that the Parisians of Soho were all drunks and womanisers. Phil Cohen is a long-standing activist and now academic, who has written his memoir of radical Bloomsbury, while writer and club manager Sophie Parkin’s history of drinking clubs takes Soho as its epicentre, and in particular the Colony Club on Dean Street. Phil Cohen was sent to St Paul’s School and later Oxford, but his attention was taken up by the London of Somerstown and Bloomsbury. As a youth worker, he wandered through the radical 1960s, being involved in various movements of the Fluxus and Situationist art scene that he met in bookshops like Better Books, India, and later Gay’s the Word, and working for a while as an assistant to the surrealist John Latham. He participated in the radical psychoanalytic movement led by R. D. Laing, paying for his treatment with more youth work, and then took part in the Dialectic of Liberation conference with Black Power’s Stokely Carmichael, New Leftist Herbert Marcuse and Beat poet Allen Ginsberg at the Roundhouse in 1967.
    [Show full text]
  • (30.03.2015) Contents 1 Introduction and Context
    SOMERS TOWN NEIGHBOURHOOD PLAN : 2015 - 2025 TO SOMERS TOWN NEIGHBOURHOOD FORUM (30.03.2015) CONTENTS 1 INTRODUCTION AND CONTEXT 2 WHY DOES SOMERS TOWN NEED A NEIGHBOURHOOD PLAN 3 WHO PREPARED THE PLAN 4 HOW THE PLAN WAS PREPARED 5 VISION AND AIM OF THE PLAN 6 POLICIES 6.1 ECONOMIC AND EMPLOYMENT POLICIES 6.2 MEANWHILE USES POLICIES 6.3 MOVEMENT POLICIES 6.4 HOUSING POLICIES 6.5 ENVIRONMENT AND GREEN SPACE POLICIES 6.6 COMMUNITY AND CULTURAL FACILITIES 7 HS2 and CR2 8 PROJECTS 9 DELIVERING THE NEIGHBOURHOOD PLAN APPENDICES: 1. Somers Town profile 2. Neighbourhood BoundarY and Forum applications to LB Camden 3. Somers Town Neighbourhood Forum (STNF) Constitution 4. Expert support and advice 5. Timeline and bibliographY 6. Participating organisations and groups since 2011 7. Residents Housing and Open Space SurveY Findings 8. HS2 Petition 9. Somers Town Job Hub 10. CommunitY Cinema ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS: 1 1. INTRODUCTION AND CONTEXT Somers Town Neighbourhood: Local planning context, Euston Area Plan (EAP)1 1.1 Somers Town Neighbourhood BoundarY Plan including part of Euston Area Plan boundarY (Plan 1) As Plan 1 indicates, Somers Town is clearly defined on 3 of its 4 sides By major road and rail infrastructure. As such it is an oBvious, geographical, neighBourhood. Somers Town’s southern boundary is Euston Road – part of the Inner city ring road (A 501). The Central Business District of London extends across the Euston Road into south Somers Town (between Phoenix Road and Euston Road) Immediately to the east lies the Kings Cross St Pancras Growth / Opportunity Area (international, national and metropolitan transport huB plus associated property development: Kings Cross Central).
    [Show full text]
  • Hattori Hachi.’ My Favourite Books
    Praise for ‘A great debut novel.’ The Sun ‘Hattie is joined on her terrifying adventures by some fantastic characters, you can’t help but want to be one of them by the end – or maybe you’re brave enough to want to be Hattie herself . .’ Chicklish ‘Hachi is strong, independent, clever and remarkable in every way . I can’t shout loud enough about Hattori Hachi.’ My Favourite Books ‘Jane Prowse has completely nailed this novel. I loved the descriptions, the action, the heart-stopping moments where deceit lurks just around the corner. The story is fabulous, while almost hidden profoundness is scattered in every chapter.’ Flamingnet reviewer, age 12 ‘Hattori Hachi is like the female Jackie Chan, she has all the ninjutsu skills and all the moves! The Revenge of Praying Mantis is one of my all time favourite books! I love the fact that both boys and girls can enjoy it.’ Jessica, age 12 ‘I couldn’t put this book down – it was absolutely brilliant!’ Hugo, age 9 ‘This delightful book is full of ninja action and packed with clever surprises that will hook anyone who reads it!’ Hollymay, age 15 ‘This was the best book I’ve ever read. It was exciting and thrilling and when I started reading it, I could not put it back down.’ Roshane, age 18 ‘Amazing! Couldn’t put it down. Bought from my school after the author’s talk and finished it on the very next day! Jack, age 12 This edition published by Silver Fox Productions Ltd, 2012 www.silverfoxproductions.co.uk First published in Great Britain in 2009 by Piccadilly Press Ltd.
    [Show full text]
  • 50 Things to Do in London There's More to Elizabeth Tower Than Just
    May, 2016 | VOLUME 1 | NUMBER 40 LAKEFRONTTIMES.COM | FREE The Best of London 50 things to do in London There’s more to Elizabeth Tower than just Big Ben Photo taken at the Palace of Westminster of a day of Parliament opening. Cloud coverage shows a storm brewing in London. Photo by: Guinevere Everidge The London Journey 2 LAKEFRONT TIMES MAY, 2016 lakefronttimes.com Which is more famous? Big Ben or the Tower? The London Journey By: Guinevere Everidge Most tourists and foreigners The great bell hung in New During World War II the light original great bell that read, actually think that “Big Ben” Palace Yard for a year where it for the clock was dimmed but “Sir Benjamin Hall MP Chief was the tower itself, but really was tested repeatedly, before the bell still rang. Commision of Works.” it is the bell inside the clock cracking in 1857. It was then The roof of the tower Sir Benjamin Hall was in tower. that a new bell was cast, the one sustained minimal damage but charge of the construction The tower, called “Elizabeth we know today as “Big Ben.” was still in working order. of the bell. He was no longer Tower” was renamed in 2012, in This time the bell was The tower is one of the most commisioner when the second honor of her Diamond Jubilee, weighed at 13.5 tons and took iconic landmarks of London bell was cast so therefore no better known as her 60th year 30 hours to hoist into its place and one of the top tourist inscription was made.
    [Show full text]
  • Camden Cultural and Community Event Calendar 2021 Camden Together
    CAMDEN CULTURAL AND COMMUNITY EVENT CALENDAR 2021 CAMDEN TOGETHER SEPTEMBER Date Event Venue Every Saturday and Regent's Park Music Festival on the Bandstand Regent's Park Sunday Every Sunday Acoustic Music Sessions Waterlow Park Every Wednesday - Hidden London Kingsway Tours Kingsway Subway Sunday Every Sunday Park Yoga at The Orchard (Second Lawn) Waterlow Park 03/09/2021 Hillgrove Creates: Music Production Workshop ARC Music Studio 03/09/2021 Estimate Time Waiting Performances St Giles in the Fields 03- 04/09/21 Tank Party Wilken Street 04/09/2021 Fitzrovia Street Party Whitfield St 04/09/2021 Roundhouse at Fitzroiva Street Party Whitfield St 04/09/2021 London Marathon Walk Goldington Crescent Gardens 04/09/2021 Hillgrove Creates: Sculpture Workshop Belsize Library 04/09/2021 Songhaven Concert in the Gardens St George's Gardens 04/09/2021 Festival Bunting Making Workshop Tolmer's Square 04/09/2021 Ambassadors for Change, Changemakers Day 3 Point Park, Raydon Street 04/09/2021 Creative Action Day Queen's Crescent High Street 05/09/2021 The Camden Yiddish Parade JW3 to Kilburn Grange Park 05/09/2021 Hillgrove Creates: Painting Workshop Belsize Library 05/09/2021 Palestine charity event Cumberland market pitch 07/09/2021 Hillgrove Creates: Script-Writing Workshop Bray TRA Room 07/09/2021 Hillgrove Creates: Music Production Workshop ARC Music Studio 08/09/2021 Hillgrove Creates: Music Production Workshop ARC Music Studio 09/09/2021 Hillgrove Creates: Theatre Performance Belsize Library Workshop 09/09/2021 Hillgrove Creates: Music Production
    [Show full text]
  • Roundhouse Access Guide 1. Introduction 2. Contact Details 3
    Roundhouse Access Guide 1. Introduction 2. Contact Details 3. Venue Description 4. Bookable Access Facilities 5. How to apply 6. Travel Guide 7.1 By Tube 7.2 By Overground 7.3 By Bus 7.4 By Coach 7.5 By CarArrival Guide 7. Toilets 8. Customers with Medical Requirements 9. Access to Performance 9.1 Facilities for Deaf and Hard of Hearing Patrons 9.2 Facilities for Blind or Vision-Impaired Visitors 9.3 Venue Accessibility for Wheelchair Users 9.4 Relaxed Performances at the Roundhouse 10. Assistance Dogs 11. Strobe Lighting ///////////////////////////////////////////////// 1. Introduction We’re committed to making all aspects of your visit to the Roundhouse enjoyable, universally welcoming and physically accessible and are proud to have been awarded a Gold Standard Award from Attitude is Everything, recognising our on-going commitment to provide the best possible experience for deaf and disabled visitors ///////////////////////////// 2. Contact Details To discuss any access-related enquiries, please don’t hesitate to contact us: [email protected] www.roundhouse.org.uk 0300 6789 222, Option 3 (Roundhouse Access Enquiries and Accessible Ticket Purchasing) Roundhouse, Chalk Farm Road, London, NW1 8EH We will endeavor to respond to your enquiries as soon as possible. Generally speaking, this will be within 24 hours, though postal responses and requests received outside workings hours (weekends and holidays) may take a little longer. //////////////////////////////////// 3. Venue Description The Roundhouse has step free (lift) access to Accessible Toilets, Bars and Performance Spaces on all levels as well as level access to the Box Office, MADE Bar and Kitchen and Paul Hamlyn Roundhouse Studios on Level 0.
    [Show full text]
  • C4,700 Sq Ft 5Th Floor Office to Let Building Specification
    C4,700 SQ FT 5TH FLOOR OFFICE TO LET BUILDING The Roundhouse (212 Regent’s Park Road, NW1) is an award winning, contemporary, design led building constructed from upcycled shipping containers. An additional storey is being installed. London Planning Awards 2015/2016 BEST NEW PLACE TO WORK New London Awards 2016 Office Buildings WINNER SPECIFICATION • Bike racks • Commissionaire • Passenger lift • Showers • Shell and core 4th floor fit out FLOORPLAN Balcony WC Kitchenette Lift WC Balcony View over The Roundhouse into The City LOCATION KENTISH TOWN WEST The property is located on Regent’s Park Road and is a one Kentish minute walk from Chalk Farm Town Underground station. Nearby stations include Camden Road CHALK FARM Overground, Kentish Town West Overground, Camden Town Underground and Mornington CAMDEN ROAD Crescent Underground. The Camden property is a short walk from Market Camden Market. Primrose Hill CAMDEN Regent’s Terms: Upon application Canal EPC: A(17) King’s Cross MORNINGTON CRESENT Regent’s Park KING’S CROSS Hannah Buxton Mark Gilbart-Smith 020 7075 2858 020 7409 5925 ST PANCRAS EUSTON [email protected] [email protected] INTERNATIONAL Important Notice: Savills and their clients give notice that: 1. They are not authorised to make or give any representations or warranties in relation to the property either here or elsewhere, either on their own behalf or on behalf of their client or otherwise They assume no responsibility for any statement that may be made in these particulars. These particulars do not WARREN STREET form part of any offer or contract and must not be relied upon as statements or representations of fact.
    [Show full text]
  • Roundhouse Events
    ROUNDHOUSE EVENTS EVENT OPPORTUNITIES IN AN ICONIC VENUE E:E: [email protected] [email protected] T: 020 7424 6771 T: 020 7424 6771 1 WHYHIRE THE ROUNDHOUSE? From Victorian beginnings as a steam-engine repair shed, to legendary cultural venue, the Roundhouse is steeped in history. Having hosted performances from Jimi Hendrix, The Doors and Pink Floyd during the 60s and 70s, the Roundhouse re-opened in 2006 following a £30m refurbishment. Performances from Britney Spears, Radiohead, Pharrell Williams and The Chemical Brothers have re-established the Roundhouse as one of London’s most iconic music venues and performance spaces. We’re available for private and corporate hire offering over 2500sqm of event space. Whether you are planning a dinner, drinks reception or awards ceremony the Roundhouse is the perfect venue to create the ultimate event. WE’RE A BIT “STUNNING − THE PERFECT BACKDROP FOR HOSPITALITY.” SPECIAL ITV There’s nothing quite like an event at the Roundhouse. Our clients enjoy... A beautiful building Explore a Grade 2 listed building, where original features sit alongside modern glass and concrete. A space where history is made Stand on the same stage that once played host to David Bowie, the Rolling Stones and Andy Warhol. A creative playground Go wild on the blank canvas our Main Space provides and make the most of our incredible lighting and sound packages. A helping hand Our attentive team of event specialists will work with you to realise your vision for your event. VENUE HIRE One of the most stunning and architecturally astounding venues in London, the Main Space is the beating heart of the Roundhouse.
    [Show full text]
  • Camden Town High Street London, UK
    Camden Town High Street Lively Living on London, UK Camden High Street Deanna Goldy | Claire Harlow Colorful and funky, Camden Town High Street draws around 300,000 visitors each weekend. Camden Town High Street is located in Camden, a bor- ough just east of the heart of London. Camden is among the most diverse neighbor- hoods in London and High Street is well-known and loved for its artisans, unique shops, lively markets and alternative culture. Left Top: Camden High Street, from Google Street View Left Bottom: Vicinity of Greater London, from cityoflond.gov.uk Right: Camden High Street and immediate context, from Google Maps CAMDEN TOWN, LONDON “Working together strengthens and promotes a sense of community.” -Camden Together Neighborhood Character Ethnic Diversity: 27% non-white (Black African, Bangladeshi, Indian, Black Caribbean Chinese among others), 20% non-British white, 53% British white Languages spoken: more than 120 languages spoken including English, Bengali, Sylheti, Somali, Albanian, Arabic, French, Spanish, Portuguese and Lingala Historic preservation: 39 Conservation Areas and over 5,600 structures and buildings listed as architectural or historical interest Religion: 47% Christian, 12% Muslim, 6% Jewish, 4% Buddhist, Hindu and other, 22% non-religious, 10% no response to question Social Deprivation: 66% “educated urbanites”, 29% “inner city adversity” Famous residents of Camden Town: George Orwell, Charles Dickens, Mary Shelley, photo credit http-_k43.pbase.com_u44_louloubelle_large_28774912. and Liam Gallagher, lead
    [Show full text]
  • Darcus Howe: a Political Biography
    Bunce, Robin, and Paul Field. "‘Dabbling with Revolution’: Black Power Comes to Britain." Darcus Howe: A Political Biography. London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2014. 27–42. Bloomsbury Collections. Web. 1 Oct. 2021. <http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781472544407.ch-002>. Downloaded from Bloomsbury Collections, www.bloomsburycollections.com, 1 October 2021, 10:59 UTC. Copyright © Robin Bunce and Paul Field 2014. You may share this work for non-commercial purposes only, provided you give attribution to the copyright holder and the publisher, and provide a link to the Creative Commons licence. 2 ‘ Dabbling with Revolution ’ : Black Power Comes to Britain Th e Dialectics of Liberation conference of July 1967 brought the 1960s ’ counterculture to the heart of London. Th e 2-week conference, convened by R. D. Laing and leading fi gures in the anti-psychiatry movement, featured contributions from Beat Generation writers William Burroughs and Allen Ginsberg; Emmett Grogan, founder of the San Francisco anarchist movement Th e Diggers; and the Frankfurt School neo-Marxist, Herbert Marcuse (Cooper 1968: 9). Th e conference practised the countercultural values that it preached, spontaneously transforming the Roundhouse and Camden ’ s pubs and bars into informal collegiums, the founding event of the anti-university of London (Ibid., 11). Black Power, a movement that had emerged at the cutting edge of the American Civil Rights struggle the year before, had several representatives at the conference. Th e headline black radical and the most controversial speaker by far was Howe ’ s fellow Trinidadian and childhood friend, Stokely Carmichael, now the harbinger of the Black Power revolution. Th e British press responded to his visit by branding him ‘ an evil campaigner of hate ’ and ‘ the most eff ective preacher of racial hatred at large today ’ (Humphry and Tindall 1977: 63).
    [Show full text]