The Duke Of Wellington, Marylebone - pub details
Description
The First Floor Dining Room at The Duke of Wellington is open days a week. Tuesday - Sunday 12.30 - 3.30 7.00 - 10.00
A Modern British menu is available in the Bar Area 7 days a week - 12.30 - 3.30 / 7.00 - 10.00pm
Full range of Lagers,Seasonal Ales & Extensive wine list
(last updated: 10th Jun 2008)
Address: 94a Crawford Street, Marylebone, London, W1H 2HQ [map] [gmap]
Tel: 0871 917 0007 (ref 862)
Website: http://www.thedukew1.co.uk
Marylebone (0.2 miles), Baker Street (0.3 miles), Edgware Road (0.4 miles)
London Marylebone (0.2 miles), London Paddington (0.7 miles), London Euston (1.5 miles)
Pub facilities/features:
- Food served (7 days - 12.30 - 3.30 7.00 - 10.00), Sunday roast, Gluten free meals available, Real ale (Deuchars IPA/Greene King IPA / Seasonal Guest Ale)
- Outside seating, Dogs allowed, Children allowed, Credit cards accepted, Function room for hire (1st Floor Dining Room Open 7 days), Wireless internet access
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other pubs nearby:
Thornbury Castle, Marylebone (0.1 miles), Occo, Marylebone (0.1 miles), Beehive, Marylebone (0.1 miles), Larrik, Marylebone (0.2 miles), Harcourt Arms, Marylebone (0.2 miles) - see more nearby pubs
user reviews of the Duke Of Wellington, Marylebone
please note - reviews on this site are purely the opinion of site visitors, so don't take them too seriously.
5 most recent reviews of 32 shown - see all reviews
| I'd never been there before the make-over, so I can only judge it on its own terms (while agreeing to be saddened by the trend that its transformation represents). On this basis, I have to say that I was very favourably impressed. The service was friendly and helpful, and, while admitting that nothing's cheap here, the beer, wine and food were all good. The atmosphere was much better than I'd feared - a surpisingly mixed clientele, with lots of people just in for a drink, denying the impression that this is now an entirely food-dominated establishment. Not bad at all. earlydrinker - 5 Nov 2008 10:40 |
| rubbish , nothing "pub" about this place. if i wanted to sit somewhere surrounded by prams and MILFS, this place is great. if i want a beer with the mates i def wont come here kiwiphil - 12 Aug 2008 12:51 |
| I wanted to hate this new gastropub because it replaced a corking little boozer that dripped character from every creaky pore. The transformation antique to gastro-chic has been accomplished with the standard asylum white-washing of the walls and removal of decorative trinkets. The place has been culturally sterilised and the charm is gone. However, the food is great. I was dragged there by a "food-loving" friend of mine and had some bisque and cottage pie. Both were excellent. Even the bread on the side was cooked fresh and tasted great. Long the lunch, short the evening pint. xyrion - 6 May 2008 13:37 |
| I totally agree with the last comment. Except this isn't "virtually" a restaurant, it is one. I went there on Saturday, admittedly lunchtime, and it was full of prams and people eating in hushed tones. I never went to this pub unfortunately but I can imagine it was a lot more interesting than my experience on Saturday. The food was incredibly expensive and not up to much too. Hockers - 28 Jan 2008 17:07 |
| I wish restaurateurs would open up restaurants in empty shops rather than ruining traditional pubs. In it's old guise this place had real character and was a place for everyone - now its virtually identical in look an execution to numerous other gastropubs. The march of predictable, safe uniformity continues unabated and not even Marylebone is safe. This is virtually a restaurant now - so much so that if you want to find a review of it in the papers, you need to look under the restaurant section. Planner_21 - 18 Dec 2007 21:45 |
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