The upper middle-class Bloomsbury set, an intellectual group was an informal network of artists, critics and writers who lived in Bloomsbury, WC1. One of the memebers, Virginia Woolf, was author of the novel Mrs Dalloway, who lends her name to the newly opened Dalloway Terrace. The book itself revolves around the efforts of the heroine, middle-aged society woman Clarissa Dalloway, to plan a party. Perhaps what she needed was a team of helpful staff like those working at the Bloomsbury.
Have you ever found yourself searching for that perfect cosy terrace in London, illuminated by candles and heated? Or a space with an open roof that acts as a sun-trap and is hidden away from the hustle & bustle of London? Well if the answer is yes then good news, I’ve found it and it’s called the Dalloway Terrace. It’s one of those rare encounters which literally leaves you gasping at its beauty and then quickly imagining all the potential that goes with it – such as Summer drinking while getting a suntan. This is my kind of venue and I plan to make it my new home. Lets just hope my office doesn’t decide to move from Holborn anytime soon.
We had afternoon tea for 3 at the Bloomsbury Hotel today. The ambience in the Coral Room was great and the setting very elegant. Service was excellent and the food and tea both also very much so. They were also very good about the fact that we had a toddler with us and gave him a Bloomsbury teddy bear to play with :) We would highly recommend this venue and special experience!
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