-The Piccadilly-
Review:
The Piccadilly Café Bar, previously called Rehab, is an airy and spacious single roomed Bar situated on the main throughfare of Piccadilly. It leans more towards that café vibe with the main focus being food and the escape rooms downstairs but it still has a fairly large but standard keg offering, albeit at a rather high price for a pint. The room itself is beautifully decorated with a botanic feel, plants hang in the windows and prints adorn the walls. Towards the back is the main bar and a small open kitchen where you can watch the chefs at work. A cosy sofa is in one window with chunky wooden furniture wrapping round the interior and a friendly social canteen feel from the central benches.
Access from street level is great although the toilets are situated downstairs, they’re a little rough and ready but perfectly serviceable. They also have a couple of tables and chairs out on the street although Piccadilly isn’t the nicest street for alfresco drinking with its heavy traffic, it’s much more pleasant to sit within the light filled room and gaze out at the hustle and bustle through the plants and fairy lights.
The staff were all friendly and welcoming and although there wasn’t much that tickled my fancy beer wise there was at least a bit of variety. The Piccadilly is probably best recommended if you wanted to grab a peaceful bite to eat in its relaxed atmosphere, if that was the case it would certainly be worth popping in.
The Piccadilly Café Bar, previously called Rehab, is an airy and spacious single roomed Bar situated on the main throughfare of Piccadilly. It leans more towards that café vibe with the main focus being food and the escape rooms downstairs but it still has a fairly large but standard keg offering, albeit at a rather high price for a pint. The room itself is beautifully decorated with a botanic feel, plants hang in the windows and prints adorn the walls. Towards the back is the main bar and a small open kitchen where you can watch the chefs at work. A cosy sofa is in one window with chunky wooden furniture wrapping round the interior and a friendly social canteen feel from the central benches.
Access from street level is great although the toilets are situated downstairs, they’re a little rough and ready but perfectly serviceable. They also have a couple of tables and chairs out on the street although Piccadilly isn’t the nicest street for alfresco drinking with its heavy traffic, it’s much more pleasant to sit within the light filled room and gaze out at the hustle and bustle through the plants and fairy lights.
The staff were all friendly and welcoming and although there wasn’t much that tickled my fancy beer wise there was at least a bit of variety. The Piccadilly is probably best recommended if you wanted to grab a peaceful bite to eat in its relaxed atmosphere, if that was the case it would certainly be worth popping in.