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Criterion Restaurant

Criterion Restaurant
Crit Photo.jpg
Restaurant interior
Criterion Restaurant is located in Central London
Criterion Restaurant
Restaurant information
Established 1873
Food type haute cuisine
Dress code Smart casual
Street address 224 Piccadilly
City London
Postal/ZIP code W1J 9HP
Country United Kingdom
Coordinates 51°30′36″N 0°8′3″W / 51.51000°N 0.13417°W / 51.51000; -0.13417Coordinates: 51°30′36″N 0°8′3″W / 51.51000°N 0.13417°W / 51.51000; -0.13417
Website saviniatcriterion.co.uk

The Criterion Restaurant is an opulent restaurant complex facing Piccadilly Circus in the heart of London. It was built by architect Thomas Verity in Neo-Byzantine style for the partnership Spiers and Pond, which opened it in 1873. Apart from fine dining facilities it has a bar. It is a Grade II* listed building and is in the Top 10 most historic and oldest restaurants in the world.

In the first Sherlock Holmes story, A Study in Scarlet, Dr. Watson is told of his prospective roommate after he meets a friend at the Criterion.

The restaurant is now open with the name of Savini At Criterion.

In 1870 the building agreement for Nos. 219–221 (consec.) Piccadilly and Nos. 8–9 Jermyn Street was purchased by Messrs. Spiers and Pond, a firm of wine merchants and caterers, who held a limited architectural competition for designs for a large restaurant and tavern with ancillary public rooms. The competition was won by architect Thomas Verity. Building work began in the summer of 1871, and was completed in 1873 at a total cost of over £80,000 (£8 million adjusted for inflation). The contractors included Messrs. Hill, Keddell and Waldram and Messrs. George Smith and Company.

It was designed by Thomas Verity as a five-level complex with its Marble Hall and Long Bar on the ground floor; dining rooms on the first and second floors; a ballroom on the third floor and a theatre in the basement. The interiors of the new building were extensively decorated with ornamental tile-work, one of the first examples of the use of this material on such a scale following its successful use in the recently completed refreshment rooms at the South Kensington Museum (now the Victoria and Albert Museum).


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