Volcanic Wine Awards | The Jancis Robinson Story

The City wakes up at the weekend

Saturday 3 June 2017 • 5 min read
Image

I can still recall two comments from the late J D F Jones, the Financial Times Weekend editor who hired me as the paper’s restaurant correspondent back in 1989. 

The first was a quick question. ‘Do you want your byline to be Nick Lander or Nicholas Lander?’, he asked me briskly. I chose the latter (more gravitas, in my opinion) and I have been known by this name professionally ever since. 

The second was a piece of advice, one of the few he bothered to give me. ‘Don’t write about any restaurants in the City', he said, referring to London’s old financial centre on the site of what was the original city of London. ‘Our readers spend Monday to Friday working there and they don’t want to read about it at the weekend.’

That was when the FT was based in Bracken House, before its move south across the river. It was also when I was introduced as ‘our new restaurant critic’ to a former editor of the paper, who grunted, ‘Have we really stooped to this?’. Soon after I joined, in January 1993, and with the support of my then Weekend editor Max Wilkinson, I persuaded the FT to run the Lunch for a Fiver promotion in which 130 of the UK’s restaurants offered FT readers a two-course lunch menu for £5. At the time this transformed many people’s opinion of ‘the pink ‘un’.

That was then, of course, when the City was not just male-dominated but still firmly a male-orientated district of London where stockbrokers worked and the memories of bowler hats and furled umbrellas, claret for lunch, and the place as quiet as the grave from Friday afternoon until Monday morning, still prevailed.

No longer. This has come home to me most forcibly over the past couple of years as I have found myself, wearing my consultant hat, working on two projects very much in the heart of the City.

The first, decidedly long-term, project has been centred on the new Norman Foster-designed headquarters for Bloomberg on the block that runs from Sweetings, the restaurant that still opens only for weekday lunches, along Queen Victoria Street to Mansion House, down the always-busy Walbrook, to the front of Cannon Street station and then back again along Cannon Street itself with St Paul’s not too far in the distance.

This will incorporate 10 new cafes and restaurants, granted as part of Bloomberg’s planning permission for their offices upstairs. The stipulation was that they replicate the retail and restaurant spaces that had previously existed. I persuaded Bloomberg to aim for a space entirely dedicated to hospitality, with crucial input from Richard Coraine, the affable chief development officer for Danny Meyer’s Union Square Hospitality Group. Also vital was the input from Barnaby Collins, the project’s planning consultant from DP9; from Matthew Lusty from Stanhope, who has supervised the building’s construction; from Kathryn Mallon from Bloomberg, whose influence has proved crucial; and Tracey Pollard of letting agents Bruce Gillingham Pollard. In addition, of course, there has been input from myriad lawyers on both sides of the Atlantic. The line up of restaurants will include branches of Caravan, Vinoteca, Homeslice, Koya, Brigadier (an offshoot of Gymkhana) and Bleecker Burger, many of them venturing into the City for the first time.

My second involvement with a City development, although far more tenuous at this stage, is alongside Sir Stuart Lipton and Peter Rogers of Lipton Rogers while they act on behalf of AXA Insurance in the redevelopment of 22 Bishopsgate, which, when finished in mid 2019, will be a 60-storey tower that will be home to many a new start-up. On its second floor, 22,000 sq ft of hospitality will be open to all those working in the building, and anyone who is not.

It is not difficult to imagine why these building projects have carried on after the Brexit referendum but more puzzling to me is the continued enthusiasm of so many hospitality providers in seeking a site in the City. Or, perhaps the fault actually lies with me and my age, and my long-held pre- and now misconceptions about the area.

Certainly, a great deal has changed in the last 30 years. Perhaps beginning with Sir Terence Conran’s bold move south of Tower Bridge with Le Pont de la Tour, restaurateurs have been changing the gastronomic face of the City. D&D, who took over the Conran restaurants, have pursued this, with the Coq d’Or and then Madison, their rooftop bar that is perhaps the highest-grossing restaurant in the company. Then there has been the redevelopment around Broadgate, One New Change, as well as the tendency of developers to put hospitality on the top floors of their newest developments such as The Shard, the Sky Garden on top of the so-called Walkie Talkie building at 20 Fenchurch Street in the far right of this picture (when seen on the home page), and Duck and Waffle, the restaurant that is open 24/7 on top of Heron Tower.

There has also been the massive increase in tourist numbers, a process initiated by the rebuilding of Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre, then continued by the successful transformation of Tate Modern and all knit nicely together by the construction of the Millennium Bridge, a proposal that was initially rejected by the City of London, the authority that control the banks of the River Thames on which the bridge is based, on the grounds that not enough pedestrians would use it. Access for so many of these tourists has been facilitated by the expansion, and proximity, of London City Airport. And then more recently the London tourist boom has been fuelled by the slump in the value of the pound.

The City has long had a missing factor – customers at the weekend. The recent opening of The Ned by Soho House with a collection of eating places along its sumptuous ground floor (the building was originally the HQ of the Midland Bank and is named after the nickname of its architect, Sir Edward Lutyens) has drawn huge crowds throughout the week on the back of equally extensive press coverage. But it is the crowds that The Ned has lured at weekends that have been particularly impressive.

So there you have it. A small quartier of London town with an unprecedented history and a huge density of people working long hours in it, most recently the example of the three-way merger between Nabarro and Olswang with CMS Cameron McKenna that will be realised in their numerous hungry and thirsty solicitors now working in Cannon Place. Add in the tourists, lured by the attraction of the public realm and artwork that I know will surround the Bloomberg HQ, and there exists the basis for a thriving seven-day-a-week operation, from early morning to reasonably late at night, a scenario that every restaurateur dreams of.

But if the umbrellas and the bowler hats have gone, then so I believe should the name. Who will think of something more pertinent, more feminine, more 21st century, than the City? This name change is surely now long overdue.

Become a member to continue reading
会员
$135
/year
每年节省超过15%
适合葡萄酒爱好者
  • 存取 287,194 条葡萄酒点评 & 15,841 篇文章
  • 存取《牛津葡萄酒指南》《世界葡萄酒地图集》
核心会员
$249
/year
 
适合收藏家
  • 存取 287,194 条葡萄酒点评 & 15,841 篇文章
  • 存取《牛津葡萄酒指南》《世界葡萄酒地图集》
  • 提前 48 小时获取最新葡萄酒点评与文章
专业版
$299
/year
供个人葡萄酒专业人士使用
  • 存取 287,194 条葡萄酒点评 & 15,841 篇文章
  • 存取《牛津葡萄酒指南》《世界葡萄酒地图集》
  • 提前 48 小时获取最新葡萄酒点评与文章
  • 可将最多 25 条葡萄酒点评与评分 用于市场宣传(商业用途)
商务版
$399
/year
供葡萄酒行业企业使用
  • 存取 287,194 条葡萄酒点评 & 15,841 篇文章
  • 存取《牛津葡萄酒指南》《世界葡萄酒地图集》
  • 提前 48 小时获取最新葡萄酒点评与文章
  • 可将最多 250 条葡萄酒点评与评分 用于市场宣传(商业用途)
Pay with
Visa logo Mastercard logo American Express logo Logo for more payment options
Join our newsletter

Get the latest from Jancis and her team of leading wine experts.

By subscribing you agree with our Privacy Policy and provide consent to receive updates from our company.

More Nick on restaurants

Lilibet's raw fish bar
Nick on restaurants 周六午餐有什么特别之处?这是一个关于在梅费尔最新开业餐厅享用午餐的故事。非常精致! 40多年来,这一直是我一周中最喜欢的一餐。事实上...
Sylt with beach and Strandkörbe
Nick on restaurants 年度美食盛宴回顾。上图为德国叙尔特岛 (Sylt),2025年7月为尼克 (Nick) 提供了过多的美食享受。 每年这个时候...
Poon's dining room in Somerset House
Nick on restaurants 一位女儿重新唤起了对她父母深受喜爱的中餐厅的回忆。 潘氏这个姓氏与酒店业和中式烹饪界有着悠久的渊源。 从比尔·潘 (Bill...
Alta keg dispense
Nick on restaurants 在伦敦市中心最繁忙的快餐聚集地之一,一家新餐厅深受西班牙风味影响。 勇敢地穿过伦敦西区摄政街 (Regent Street)...

More from JancisRobinson.com

cacao in the wild
Free for all 脱醇葡萄酒是真正葡萄酒的糟糕替代品。但有一两种可口的替代品。本文的一个版本由金融时报 发表。上图为 drinkkaoba.com...
Sunny garden at Blue Farm
Don't quote me 时差反应,重感冒,但不知怎么地还是享受了很多好酒。 这篇日记是双倍分量,涵盖了10月下旬到12月下旬...
Novus winery at night
Wines of the week 一股清新的空气,是节日过度放纵的完美解药。在美国标注为纳西亚科斯 [原文如此] 曼蒂尼亚。售价从 €10.60、£11.95、$19.99...
Alder's most memorable wines of 2025
Tasting articles 杯中的愉悦——和意义。 在回顾一年的品鉴时,我对那些在记忆中持续存在的东西感到着迷。哪些葡萄酒依然生动鲜明...
view of Lazzarito and the Alps in the background
Tasting articles 有关此年份的背景详情,请参阅 巴罗洛 2022 年份 – 年份报告。上图为拉扎里托 (Lazzarito) 葡萄园,背景是阿尔卑斯山。...
View of Serralunha d'Alba
Inside information 一个令人愉快的惊喜,展现出比最初预期更多的细腻和复杂性。上图为塞拉伦加·达尔巴 (Serralunga d'Alba) 的景色。...
View from Smith Madrone on Spring Mountain
Free for all 需求和价格都在下降。本文的一个版本由金融时报 发表。上图为11月初从史密斯·马德罗内 (Smith Madrone)...
The Overshine Collective
Tasting articles 这是詹西斯 (Jancis) 最近西海岸公路之旅中品评的第二批葡萄酒。上图为新成立的超越集体 (Overshine Collective)...
Wine inspiration delivered directly to your inbox, weekly
Our weekly newsletter is free for all
By subscribing you're confirming that you agree with our Terms and Conditions.