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London's 10 best roof terraces

(menu)

Come summer, some drinking dens are guaranteed to put you on top of the world. Keith Barker-Main presses the lift button for London’s best rooftop havens


rooftop - Rooftop-Garden-at-Rockwell-2010---59800.jpg

In their classic 1962 hit, soul sensations The Drifters knew exactly where to go to get away from ‘the hustling crowd and the rat-race noise’ – up on the roof. Smart move. And if that roof comes with a supply of cucumber-cool drinks, so much the better. Shoreditch House, with its inviting pool, is an obvious candidate, but if you’re not a member, or can’t tag along with someone who is, there are plenty of other high fliers to choose from.

Boundary
2-4 Boundary Street, E2 7DD
020 7729 1051

Boundary Rooftop - Boundary_Rooftop.jpgA short leap from Shoreditch House lands you on an altogether more accessible rooftop. The aerial garden atop Terence Conran’s converted former warehouse, Boundary, is not just for members. With a wood-burning open fireplace for chillier evenings and parasols for Ray-Ban days, the vibe is 1980s boho California – Tequila sunrises against a gritty London skyline. Order elderflower sling cocktails (£9), pitchers of sangria or planter’s punch (£22.50), Breton cider and wines from £4.50 a glass. Food is posh picnic/pukka barbecue, with lobster, prawns, rib-eye and trout from the robata grill, to suit a cast of creatives and demob-happy City suits.

rockwell1 - Rooftop_Garden_at_Rockwell_2010_-_46987.jpgRockwell
The Trafalgar Hotel, 2 Spring Gardens, SW1A 2TS
020 7870 2900

The Trafalgar Hotel doesn’t exactly shout the fact that it has a skyline bar from the rooftops, but persevere and you’ll discover a gem. Take the lift from the lobby all the way up, bear right and at the end of a nondescript corridor a discreet staircase leads to a fabulous, newly renovated sundeck. Some of the best views in town place you eyeball to eyeball with Horatio on his column. Cream loungers and wooden benches set the tone, and a bar – open in fine weather only – dispenses ice-cold lagers, chilled bubbly and cooling fresh fruit cocktails in coupes.

Queen of Hoxton - Queen_of_Hoxton_2010_-_DSC_0371.jpgQueen of Hoxton
1-5 Curtain Road, EC2A 3JX
020 7422 0958

The 200-capacity rooftop terrace at this Shoreditch slackers’ delight has been upgraded and generally prettified. Loungers and deckchairs sit alongside a groovy, surfs-up shack that offers a comprehensive selection of beers, wines, spirits and cocktails that major on rummy brews. New too is a daily barbecue, acoustic live sets, graffiti artists in residence and cinema alfresco, showing a programme of ‘classic’ films such as, ahem, The Goonies.

Aqua Spirit
30 Argyll Street, W1B 3BR
020 7478 0540 

Aqua roof terrace 1006_18.jpgDemi Moore, Alicia Keys and Sarah Jessica Parker have all been spotted getting into the spirit of this site's three glorious roof spaces. Happily, the lofty mixology on display does not translate into sky-high pricing: allow £9 for various tempting mixes that reflect the Japanese and Spanish themed cuisine at Aqua’s two restaurants. Wild dragon (a gin, dragon fruit, wild berries and lemongrass mule) is typical of a range of thirst-quenchers served with complimentary nibbles at aperitivo hour. Otherwise, enjoy ice-cold lager and rosé wine as DJs spin Balearic beats. And if the weather should revert to typically English form, you can take the party indoors to Aqua’s main bar.

The Big Chill House
257-259 Pentonville Road, N1 9NL
020 7427 2540

big chill house - Big_Chill_House_2011.jpgThose who aren’t spending the entire summer on the festival circuit can still get in the party mood with cava (£19.75), wine (from £13.50) or a Bellini (£5.75) on the funky terrace of The Big Chill’s King’s Cross HQ. The view may be rather more grungy than bucolic Herefordshire – the August Big Chill festival takes place in the grounds of Eastnor Castle – but the ambience is every bit as mellow. With DJs, acoustic sets, performance art, barbecues and ‘good for two people’ platters, this laid-back urban space is always a festival in its own right (though minus the mud).

rooftop4 - Roof-Gardens-2010---Copy-of-Spanish_Dusk-High-Res.jpgThe Roof Gardens
99 Kensington High Street, W8 5SA 
020 7368 3960 

This is London’s most stunning rooftop. Formerly part of long-defunct art deco department store Derry and Toms, it provides a throwback to the depressed 1930s, when escapist fantasy was all. Guests attending the venue’s chi-chi nightclub get to roam extensive grounds that include a woodland-style garden complete with stream, pond and resident flamingoes, as well as a walled mock-Tudor rose garden and a spectacular cloistered Spanish garden straight out of a Hollywood mansion. Throughout summer, weekend barbecues provide a chance to soak in this lush, landscaped wonderland.

Coq d’Argent
1 Poultry, EC2R 8EJ
020 7395 5000

rooftop3 - Coq-d'Argent-Garden-.jpgTake the express lift at D&D London’s smart City restaurant and step out into a glorious arboretum in the round. Coq d’Argent’s upper sanctum boasts trailing greenery, manicured lawns, great views of the Gherkin and, most importantly, an outdoor bar. Piper-Heidsieck or a large glass of Chablis will set you back just under a tenner, Sagres lager £4.50. Patio heaters and parasols mitigate summer’s caprices, as do high pink sandstone walls that serve equally as a windbreak or sun trap. Although it’s mostly a City workers’ haunt, such an attractive proposition deserves attention from those who don’t normally go east of Mayfair. 

The White House
65 Clapham Park Road, SW4 7EH
020 7498 3388

rooftop7 - White-House-2010---Roof-terrace.jpgA fine spot for a Sunday sundowner cocktail – a lemongrass and pomegranate mojito perhaps or a Tequila, lime, Midori and watermelon cooler – the roof at The White House provides a pretty good reason to trundle down the Northern line to sunny SW4. Lookswise, the White House is Cubist in design and wood-decked, with wines that start at around £15 or double that for fashionable fizz Prosecco. It’s also a good place for a breather when the pace gets hectic – the venue, open from Friday to Sunday only (and Thursday from 2 June), hosts full-on house nights that see in the sunrise in summer.

The Soho Sky Terrace
19-21 Great Marlborough Street, W1F 7HL
020 7297 5555

rooftop5 - Sky-Terrace-2010---Roofterrace--7.jpgOne of the area’s best-kept ‘open’ secrets, where prices are no more than West End average. Order pink Champagne, a mojito, a twinkle or good old-fashioned Pimm’s and imagine yourself part of the private jet-set as sweaty commuters jostle at the gates of hell below (the entrance to Oxford Circus tube). Pack Persol or Prada shades for when the weather goes all Saharan on us. As well as bar snacks, the barbie comes out on most days, though if rain threatens to stop play, shelter is provided.

The Driver
2-4 Wharfdale Road, N1 9RY
rooftop6 - The-Driver-2010---STV_0444_red.jpg020 7278 8827
The fifth floor of this postmodern King’s Cross pub, gastro kitchen and cocktail lounge is given over to a walled roof terrace. It’s particularly useful as a post-work flop spot or for chilling when the venue’s regular all-night house and techno clubs are in full swing. The decked space is dotted with leather sofas and carved elephant chairs, but greenery is scant; for that check out Patrick Blanc’s stunning vertical garden, whose lush foliage envelops the entire exterior of the building. Wines start at £14.50, while £6.80 buys a bramble, cosmopolitan or dark and stormy – the rum and ginger beer classic, not the weather, we hope.


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