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The Garden Ladder opened
in October 2006 after a complete refurbishment, converting it from
an Indian restaurant into the first bar in the area.
Check out some customer reviews here...
Quality Draught Lagers, Real Ales and an extensive wine and cocktail
list ensure all tastes are catered for.
A large fixed and specials menu are available, with good quality
freshly cooked dishes at reasonable prices. The kitchen opens from
1.00pm - 9.30pm every day. On Sunday afternoon a Roast Dinner Carvery
operates from 1.00pm - till its gone, with the normal menus on again
at 6.00pm.
Theme nights (60's, 70's, 80's, etc.) on the first Friday of each
month give you a chance to dig out your vintage gear and listen to
the DJ spin some classics. A prize of a bottle of Champagne
for the best dressed!!
So come and relax in a "No TV zone" and let the conversation
flow.
About Harringay
Like
most districts of London, Harringay has no formal boundaries
and cannot be precisely defined. It is centred on the section
of Green Lanes running between the northern boundary of Finsbury
Park up to the southern boundary of Ducketts Common, not far
from Turnpike Lane. The most certain boundary is formed in the
West by the Great Northern Railway. The northern boundary is
to the south of Turnpike lane, running paralell to it, somewhere
between Sydney Road and Fairfax Road. In the north-west, the
boundary roughly corresponds with a line drawn between the south
of Duckett's Common and the north end of Warwick Gardens. A line
due south of this point as far as Hermitage Road forms the eastern
boundary. South east of here to the centre of Finsbury Park completes
the south eastern limits. Although Finsbury Park is officially
part of Harringay, it forms a soft southern boundary; the actual
town boundary being formed by Endymion Road. Including the park,
Harringay has an area of about 1¾ miles (2.8km) from North
to South and ½ mile
(0.8km), at its widest point, from East to West.
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