The Mail on Sunday

Rooftop bars bring high life to London

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EVERY week our Holiday Hero NEIL SIMPSON takes an in-depth look at a holiday topic, doing all the legwork so you don’t have to. This week: Rooftop bars in London.

HEAD upwards to see a London few other visitors get to enjoy – that’s the advice that Blue Badgequali­fied tour guide Paul Metcalfe gives his guests.

‘There are now dozens of rooftop bars and restaurant­s in London, each with a different atmosphere and each with views even locals don’t know about,’ he says.

A top tip is Radio Rooftop Bar, perched on the tenth floor of the ME hotel on the edge of Covent Garden in the West End.

The ‘big four’ sights of St Paul’s Cathedral, the Shard, the London Eye and Big Ben are all in view from the terrace. Non residents can book tables for everything from eggs benedict at breakfast to champagne cocktails at night. DJs play chill-out sets as the sun goes down (radiorooft­op.com).

Even closer to the heart of town is Hotel Indigo on Leicester Square. Up on the ninth floor there’s a sleek bar and dining room plus a wraparound terrace with tables looking down on the bustle below. Service begins with mid-morning brunch and runs through to candlelit, posttheatr­e dinner (lsqrooftop.com).

A livelier rooftop experience is on offer just south of the River Thames and National Theatre near Waterloo. Up to 600 guests can squeeze on to the huge terrace of Bar Elba where colourful awnings and strings of fairy-lights make nights seem magical.

At weekends, live music and stand-up comedy compete with views of the Shard and London Eye, and groups can book a ‘cocktail tree’ with drinks ready for when you arrive (bar-elba.co.uk).

Take a short walk through the cobbled streets of Wapping, just east of Tower Bridge, to find an even more imaginativ­e rooftop bar. At the Skylight Bar on the old Tobacco Dock there’s a croquet lawn plus shuffle board, table tennis and petanque areas. The menu is described as ‘street meets comfort food’ with everything from mac and cheese to churros with chocolate sauce (skylightba­rs.com).

The (fake) grass is equally green at The Rooftop bar at The Standard hotel. It’s positioned by St Pancras

and King’s Cross stations so it makes a great first or last pit stop if you’re visiting London by train.

It’s open till 11pm and the Victorian clock tower of St Pancras station looms alongside it while the BT Tower shines in the distance. Margaritas are the most popular drinks while what’s said to be the capital’s highest taco truck provides snacks (standardho­tels.com).

Fine dining with a view of the grey dome of St Paul’s Cathedral is on offer on the top-floor terrace of the Vintry & Mercer hotel in the heart of the old City of London.

Close to the Thames, yet lost amid a rabbit warren of old wine warehouses and livery halls, the menu has a ‘best of British’ flavour. Roasted Orkney scallops and Cornish lamb are favourites (vintryandm­ercer.com).

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 ?? ?? NEW VIEWS: Terrace, left, at The Standard hotel near St Pancras. Above: A booth at Radio Rooftop Bar, Covent Garden
NEW VIEWS: Terrace, left, at The Standard hotel near St Pancras. Above: A booth at Radio Rooftop Bar, Covent Garden

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