User:Seagull123/sandbox
Drink
editApart from Ye Olde Trip to Jerusalem (allegedly built in 1189) which is below the castle and often on the tourist trail, there are over 100 licensed premises in the square mile around the centre of Nottingham.
- 1 Ye Olde Trip to Jerusalem, 1 Brewhouse Yard, ☏ +44 115 9473171. Su, M-Th: 11AM-11PM, Sa: 11AM-midnight.
- 2 Canalhouse, 48-52 Canal Street, ☏ +44 115 955 5060, canalhouse@castlerockbrewery.co.uk.
- 3 The Cornerhouse, Burton Street, ☏ +44 115 950 5168, Charlie@cornerhouse.tv.
- 4 The Playwright 38 (formerly The Orange Tree), 38 Shakespeare Street, ☏ +44 1159 473239, info@theplaywright38.co.uk.
- 5 The Lord Nelson, Lord Nelson Street, Sneinton, ☏ +44 115 911 0069.
- 6 The Bell Inn, 18 Angel Row, ☏ +44 115 9475241. Originally the site of a friary from the 12th century, it became an inn following the Dissolution of the Monasteries. Now a pub with food, drink, and sports on TV.
- 7 Ye Olde Salutation Inn, Maid Marian Way, ☏ +44 115 958 9819. The building has existed since 1240, and the pub's caves date from the 9th century. Serves food and drink in a typical pub setting.
- 8 The Ned Ludd, 27 Friar Lane, ☏ +44 115 924 3415.
- 9 Rock City, 8 Talbot Street, ☏ +44 115 950 6547, fax: +44 115 941 8438, info@rock-city.co.uk.
- 10 Pitcher and Piano, The Unitarian Church, High Pavement, ☏ +44 115 958 6081, nottingham@pitcherandpiano.com.
A good place to start is the trendy Lace Market area east of Market Square where you will also find many good restaurants. Pubs around the Market Square tend to appeal to younger drinkers with a Wetherspoon's and Yates's Wine Lodge, but the area on the canal side around the Canal House pub tends to be a little more discerning. The Hockley area also provides a range of pleasant bars to suit a range of budgets. The Cornerhouse complex (near the Royal Centre tram stop) contains some really nice bars, particularly Revolution, and close to this is The Orange Tree on Shakespeare Street. Slightly further out of the centre in the multicultural and vibrant area known as Sneinton is a wonderful pub called the Lord Nelson with a great garden and real ales. The other historic pubs include The Bell Inn, situated in the Market Square, and the Salutation, on Maid Marian Way, both of which can trace a long history and lay claim to having resident ghosts. Ask at a quiet moment for a tour of the Salutation's cellars, dug by hand into the sandstone rock below the pub and used in centuries past as a secure brewing area. The Ned Ludd is also located near the Old Market square and serves local ale from Nottingham Brewery. Rock City hosts one of the biggest student disco nights in town, with standard dance/pop music, when popular live rock bands aren't playing in town. For a different experience, try The Pitcher and Piano bar, with a slightly more mature crowd. Built as a large Anglican church it has been stylishly modernised but still contains the church's architectural history with gothic decor and stained glass windows.