Set inside the Covent Garden building that was once home to Bow Street Magistrates Court, NoMad London looks to have been worth the wait.
Big budget hotel projects are rarely delivered quickly, but NoMad London has been an especially long time coming. The team started work on the project soon after opening the inaugural NoMad hotel in New York in 2012. The lengthy gestation period is down to a change in location, an extremely complex and ambitious build and - most recently - the pandemic.
Covent Garden’s Bow Street Magistrates’ Court building - which tried many a famous name including Emmeline Pankhurst and the Kray twins - has been completely reworked internally. In fact Andrew Zobler - the owner of NoMad’s parent company Sydell Group - says the hotel is best thought of as an entirely new building within an existing one.
For 15 years,
The Real Housewives franchise has been the crown jewel of reality TV. On the surface, it’s all backstabbing and table-flipping a show filled with tiny dogs and massive diamonds. Though the wealth may be staggering, the series’ personalities are the real-life soap’s centerpiece. These finger-pointing, scandal-loving, Louboutin-wearing broads are why
Housewives not only continues to survive but thrive after all these years.
Indeed, there would be no Bravo without
Housewives and there would be no
Housewives without Andy Cohen, the franchise’s expert casting curator. Determining who stays and who goes is what’s kept viewers glued to Cohen’s empire. After getting voted off the metaphorical (or, in the case of New York, literal) island, it’s up to each Housewife how they’ll parlay their newfound fame. Some will launch a business empire, while others skulk to the washed-up reality television graveyard after using up their 15 minutes of fame.
Eleven Madison Park to reopen as plant-based restaurant
• 8 min read
How to make a gorgeous no-bake blue vegan cheesecake
Lenna Omrani shows us how to make this mesmerizing vegan dessert that’s totally gluten-free. Lucas Jackson/Reuters, FILE
After nearly 15 months since Daniel Humm closed the dining room at Eleven Madison Park due to the pandemic, the chef and owner of the Make It Nice restaurant group announced that it will officially reopen June 10 with an evolved business model and new plant-based menu. It is time to redefine luxury as an experience that serves a higher purpose and maintains a genuine connection to the community. A restaurant experience is about more than what’s on the plate. We are thrilled to share the incredible possibilities of plant-based cuisine while deepening our connection to our homes: both our city and our planet, Humm wrote in an announcement on the restaurant s website.
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