Showing 1 - 15 of 75 results
In an area heavily saturated with tourism, Zen China remains remarkably true to its northern Chinese roots. You won’t find much of the fare… more »
Slap-bang next to Charing Cross station, this smart first-floor eatery is handily located for meet-ups, post-shopping lunches or pre-show… more »
Sweeping windows ensure that you get your money’s worth of the striking riverside panoramas that are one of the big selling points at this… more »
Pitched as the more gregarious, casual arm of the Skylon experience, this modern-day classic also makes the most of ‘cracking views’ & a glorious… more »
Conveniently located on the fringes of Covent Garden & Trafalgar Square, Gilbert’s is a real boon for camera-toting tourists, shoppers &… more »
‘The kind of place you can take your oldest relative or the love of your life’, admits a supporter of Messrs Demetre & Smith’s riff… more »
With a fantastic outlook over London’s premier attractions from its permanent mooring on Victoria Embankment, the RS Hispaniola is a popular… more »
In terms of floating bars, the Thames is something of a missed opportunity, but once you get your sea legs, this 1930s’ paddle steamer is a ship-shape… more »
Garry Hollihead’s striking restaurant in the five-star Corinthia Hotel is an opulent affair, with huge windows stretching up to double-height… more »
Despite its reedy musical moniker, a piano holds pride of place at the Corinthia’s lounge – it’s cleverly integrated into the bar counter… more »
Opal is the kind of big-city venue where off-duty waiters, office workers, PAs, shop girls & students who prefer cosmopolitan to snakebite convene… more »
Cynics may dismiss the river cruises that constantly patrol the Thames as tourist traps, but there’s much to be said for an evening aboard one… more »
Set in what was the Secret Service’s WWII HQ, Equus pays homage to cavalrymen (not Peter Shaffer’s dark play), & its three comfortable rooms… more »
A much-needed refurb has re-energised this plush hotel restaurant (named after the iconic Whitehall 1212 phone number). The frayed, art-deco style… more »
When Gordon’s first opened, talk over the claret or hock might have turned to Van Gogh’s death, Tchaikovsky’s new ballet or the opening of… more »
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