Jump to content

Recommended Posts

https://www.brixtonbuzz.com/2024/07/antic-hospitality-group-owners-of-the-brixton-dogstar-go-into-administration/

Unsure how EDT will be impacted long term. 

Apologies did not notice already been posted.

 

Edited by pecksniff
Want to update post
14 hours ago, musicman said:

Argh, that sucks. Some classic South London venues on that list. Hope they manage to successfully reinvent themselves. 

  • Like 1
  • Agree 1

Probably, though presumably some of them must be losing money, there must be debt to service or other issues to cause the administration. At macro level, there are probably too many similar businesses for them all to survive. I find myself wondering similar about all the cafe's we have now. 

9 minutes ago, mrwb said:

Probably, though presumably some of them must be losing money, there must be debt to service or other issues to cause the administration. At macro level, there are probably too many similar businesses for them all to survive. I find myself wondering similar about all the cafe's we have now. 

Yes, so many new places recently opening, and with such a lot of choice, one bad or even so- so  experience might not lead to people giving them the benefit of the doubt and making  a return visit.

And there is presumably a finite pool  of potential customers, even allowing for people visiting ED just to eat there.

  • Like 1
1 hour ago, jazzer said:

Had no idea people came to just eat in ED.

I used to come to Lordship Lane with friends  in the late seventies/early eighties to eat at the Dulwich Tandoori.

None of us lived in the area, and didn't know anybody who did!

I'm pretty sure this still happens. Though probably not to the Dulwich Tandoori, where I haven't been for years.

On 16/07/2024 at 18:42, Sue said:

I used to come to Lordship Lane with friends  in the late seventies/early eighties to eat at the Dulwich Tandoori.

None of us lived in the area, and didn't know anybody who did!

I'm pretty sure this still happens. Though probably not to the Dulwich Tandoori, where I haven't been for years.

First time i came to East Dulwich was to have sunday lunch at La Careme with my parents around 1980. It was where Sema Thai was I think. I was in hall of residence round back of fox on the hill and i think they wanted to go there because east dulwich seemed 'posher' than Camberwell even back then before it was gentrified.

  • Like 1
4 hours ago, sandyman said:

First time i came to East Dulwich was to have sunday lunch at La Careme with my parents around 1980. It was where Sema Thai was I think. I was in hall of residence round back of fox on the hill and i think they wanted to go there because east dulwich seemed 'posher' than Camberwell even back then before it was gentrified.

I don't remember La Careme at all! 

But I'm not sure we ever went anywhere other than the Dulwich Tandoori 😂

I can't remember how we got there, I think one of my friends must have driven. 

I was living in South Norwood at that time, but I don't recall thinking East Dulwich was particularly posh. Though it probably was compared to South Norwood 😂

It certainly didn't seem at all posh when I moved here over thirty years ago. I remember having  to explain to people that it wasn't actually Dulwich Village .....

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • My favourite local place to buy plants, browse gorgeous pots and homewares (and eat delicious cakes) is Alexandra Nurseries in Penge. It has a wonderful vibe, the staff are knowledgeable and the array of plants is great. Genuinely my favourite local place to visit! Hard recommend. 
    • The Beeb gave Farage and the like too much air time during the run up to the vote but we all know that.  Johnson swung it I expect. 
    • Seems a bit off.  If two countries have a majority of dumbos why do we get to offload ours? Instead of us taking in theirs  The corporation reports the whole thing as a soap opera with characters. Instead of reporting the actuality.    bbc is as culpable as anyone in this whole shitshow 
    • So to enable people to experience 3 days of 'joy', our family has to endure two weeks of 7 days a week, 12 hours a day construction noise around 50m from our front window. That's HGVs driving up & down the road, constant reversing beeps from fork lifts & tractors, scaffolding poles crashing, pneumatic wrenches rattling, shouting etc etc. from 8am to 8pm. Every day. Even Sundays. Do you have all that near your house? Then there's the anti social behaviour during the festival, right outside our home - minicabs arriving, punters jumping out, chucking bottles and cans on the floor, having a quick p*ss against the wall, then off to the festival to have their 'joy'. Again & again, all afternoon & evening. For the whole bank holiday weekend. Guys having nitrous oxide parties in their cars, right outside our home at midnight, 1am.  Do you have all that near your house?  And then there's the strike afterwards, more construction noise for another week - 8am to 8pm, every day - then they disappear, leaving the park covered in fag butts, bottle tops, ring pulls, cable ties, cellophane filter tip tubes, disposable vapes, all usually trampled into the ground so that they are virtually impossible to remove. And then several months for the grass to almost recover enough for people to use again, except by then the summer is long gone.  Do you really think a "chill pill" is going to miraculously resolve all this? Please, have some empathy for people who are really impacted by this event. I've nothing against festivals, but they need to be located in a suitable space, and a small public park close to residential homes isn't it.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...