Barry Vera, who has presented on the Discovery Channel, is co-owner of the company behind the plans A NEW restaurant in Brighton has been granted a licence to sell alcohol but has been told to fit soundproofing. Chef Barry Vera will be able to serve drinks at his steak restaurant in the old Cath Kidston shop in East Street. His company, Paragon Hospitality, will also run a daytime cafe and bar at the venue despite the objections of a neighbour. Trainee teacher Jessica Burkhardt told councillors that she was worried about noise as she had moved into a flat above the shop.
The former Cath Kidston store on East Street in Brighton A NEIGHBOUR who objected to a new restaurant’s application for a drinks licence said that she was concerned about increased noise. Trainee teacher Jessica Burkhardt told a Brighton and Hove City Council licensing panel that when she moved into her flat she was not warned about the shop being turned into an eaterie. The proposed steak restaurant, in East Street, Brighton, used to be a Cath Kidston home furnishing shop. The new owner, Paragon Hospitality, wants to run it as a café and bar during the day and a steak restaurant serving British cuisine in the evenings.
Barry Vera, who presented on the Discovery Channel, is co-owner of the company behind the plans A NEW restaurant faces opposition after applying for a drinks licence in The Lanes in Brighton. Paragon Hospitality wants to convert the former Cath Kidston shop in East Street into a steak restaurant, offering breakfast and traditional afternoon tea. The premises is next to English’s Oyster Bar and the Sussex Arms. The company, owned by Adam Elliott and TV chef Barry Vera, operates the Petrichor Restaurant at London’s Cavendish Hotel and the Hideout Bar and Grill in Manchester. Mr Vera presented the Feast series on the Discovery Channel.