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The Trocadero, 17 Temple Street, Birmingham, England, currently a pub, is a dazzling demonstration of the use of coloured glazed tile and terracotta in the post-Victorian era of architecture. Formerly the Fire Engine House for the Norwich Union Insurance Company (1846, Edge & Avery), it was altered in 1883 to make the Bodega wine bar.
On 17 and 18 September 2016 the British Street Food Annual Awards was held at the site. From January 2017 the Digbeth Dining Club was held two evenings per week, Fridays and Saturdays, with the emphasis on Saturdays being on music and street entertainment. Birmingham has numerous restaurants which are parts of nationwide chains.
The building was acquired by the Birmingham Joint Stock Bank, established in 1861. [2] The bank had four branches within the city; the oldest one, here in Temple Row, was opened for business in 1862. [2] The Joint Stock Company amalgamated with Lloyds Bank in 1889. [3] The building was then used as a branch of Lloyds Bank.
Byrd refurbished the “temple” as a tourist attraction in 1949, with a fancy restaurant called Vestavia Gardens. But many credit All Steak restaurant in Cullman, about 45 minutes north of the ...
Aktar Islam (born 1980) is a multiple award-winning English Michelin-starred chef, restaurateur, and entrepreneur.. He left the Lasan Group in 2016 to work on his new, flagship project, Opheem, and launched his now-closed Italian restaurant, Legna, in winter 2018.
In 1851 a new retail drapery business was opened by a partnership formed by William Riddell and Henry Wilkinson at 78 Bull Street, Birmingham, which by 1863 had expanded to a wholesale business based in Temple Row. During 1861 two apprentices joined the company, John Rackham and William Matthews who by 1878 had become buyers for the company.
Memorials of Old Birmingham - Traditions of The Old Crown House in Der-Yat-End in the Lordship of Birmingham. Henry Wright, Temple Buildings, New Street. Thompson, Michael J (1994). The Old Crown House at Deritend, Birmingham: glimpses of its history, owners and landlords from 1368. publisher. ISBN 0-9523854-0-6. Historic England.
Engraving of the Hotel in 1800. The Royal Hotel, originally just The Hotel, was a hotel located on Temple Row in Birmingham, England.Opened in 1772, it was the first establishment in Birmingham to describe itself as a "hotel", a new term entering usage around this time to denote a more fashionable and genteel establishment than the more traditional inn.