Get back to nature with this farm-themed event space. The covered polytunnel seats 30 people for seminars and presentations or 20 for seated dinners and workshops. A community space, The Tunnel is perfect for all sorts of events, from company away days, dinners and talks, to parties and music. Now that’ll get guests talking!
Hot Hot Hot Spaces
- Venue capacity:
- Min: 10
- /
- Max: 50
Located off shore on the Thames estuary, this collection of Sea Forts makes up one of our most unusual events venues. The forts had a very short but intense life during World War II when Great Britain faced serious attacks from the Luftwaffe. During the 1960s the forts were used to house pirate radio stations.
- Venue capacity:
- Min: 10
- /
- Max: 60
This disused underground station was opened in 1907, but it closed in 1932. During the Second World War it was used as a bunker by prime minister Winston Churchill, but now it makes a great setting for mysterious events. Just off Piccadilly and a short distance from Park Lane, the station has provided the backdrop for films such as Creep and featured on several albums.
- Venue capacity:
- Min: 10
- /
- Max: 60
This derelict turn of the century flour mill can be found on the south side of Royal Victoria Dock, between the Thames Barrier and the ExCel exhibition centre. It has been described as a “decaying industrial anachronism standing defiant and alone in the surrounding subtopia”.
- Venue capacity:
- Min: 10
- /
- Max: 250
Situated on the south bank of the River Thames close to London Bridge, this historic cathedral is surrounded by railway lines and buildings, including Borough Market. The churchyard on the south side of the Cathedral is an oasis of calm and is an ideal spot for a summer drinks reception.
- Venue capacity:
- Min: 10
- /
- Max: 150
Take a flight to the skies with this beachfront venue, where guests can see Sussex as they never have before. Cruise up slowly to 450 feet high to enjoy breath-taking 360 degree views of up to 26 miles from the world’s first vertical cable car, conceived and designed by Marks Barfield Architects, the creators of the London Eye. Dine, celebrate and party in this beach building, incorporating a brasserie; heritage tea rooms; hospitality rooms; an exhibition; shop; and kids play zone. Lift-off summer 2016!
- Venue capacity:
- Min: 10
- /
- Max: 870
The ground floor of this exclusive new bar and restaurant is a relaxed and stylish Lounge and bar, perfect for breakfast, firing off a few emails between meetings, and after-work cocktails and bar bites. Downstairs in the basement club, things are a little more louche, with a restaurant drawing on Soho’s spirit of fun and indulgence.
- Venue capacity:
- Min: 10
- /
- Max: 500
This crazy golf club takes the holy trinity that is crazy golf, street food and amazing drinks and combines them all into one incredible social experience. Based on a 1920’s golf-club set in the bucolic English countryside, the secret world of this old-school clubhouse includes rolling greens, lush foliage and unparalleled hospitality. The permanent venue is just a stone’s throw from the Gherkin in the heart of London and comprises 16,000 square feet of socially competitive fun.
- Venue capacity:
- Min: 10
- /
- Max: 300
Beneath the Priory Church, this Norman Crypt is one of the few London buildings of its period and is powerfully evocative of its history. Romanesque and Gothic arches, memorial plaques, beautiful glass and fascinating tomb effigies embellish this uniquely tranquil and numinous space, which is reserved for lectures, music, meetings and contemplation.
Hide Out
–- Venue capacity:
- Min: 5
- /
- Max: 20
This World War Two air raid shelter in the heart of the West End is ready to be transformed into a glamorous subterranean events space.
The 3,200 sq ft brick and concrete shell where hundreds of Londoners sought refuge from the ferocity of the German Blitz lies directly under the gardens of Soho Square just off Oxford Street.
The entrance to the shelter, which also includes an electricity sub-station, is on the western side of the Square and there is an emergency fire escape exit through the Grade II listed mock-Tudor gardener’s cottage at its centre.