The essential guide to the best places to shop, eat and relax in Liverpool. Find the best restaurants, cinemas and nightlife spots along with general need-to-know information including shopping hours and going out tips.
Shoppers head for the city centre (Bold Street, Church
Street, Regent Street) for high street stores and the two
shopping centres here, Clayton Square and St John's. Lewis's
department store on Renshaw Street (at the top of Church
Street) is a good all-rounder, selling menswear, womenswear
and homeware in an imposing building.
For quirky crafts including Beatles memorabilia, the Albert
Dock complex is your best bet. If it's raining, seek cover
in Clayton Square covered mall, or better still find
designerwear (including a Vivienne Westwood boutique) under
the shelter of bijoux Cavern Walks. Located in Matthew
Street, this is where The Beatles sang in sweaty surrounds.
Stanley Dock, a former tobacco warehouse, is the
venue for a lively Sunday market. Thousands come to peruse
the 500+ stalls for second-hand books, clothes, antiques,
fruit, vegetables and bric-a-brac. A Farmers' Market
brings the country to Monument Place and London Road on the
1st and 3rd Sat of the month (mornings only). Or try the
Wirral Farmers' Market (2nd Sat of the month)
held in Grove Street, New Ferry to find Welsh black beef,
local honey and other yummy specialities of the North West.
Time your visit for the grand St Helen's Continent
Market (May and Nov) in Church Square for French
cheeses, German sausage, Dutch flowers and Belgian
chocolates.
Standard opening hours are Monday to Saturday 9am-5.30pm.
Also within easy reach of Liverpool is Cheshire Oaks, one of
Europe's largest designer outlet villages. Big name brands
can be picked up for bargain prices here.
Live music venues, clubs, cabarets and an enormous variety of
drinking bars ranging from traditional pubs to the latest
designer cafés combine to make Liverpool's night
scene one of the liveliest in the UK. There are more than 250 venues to choose from and
dressing up for Saturday nights is de rigueur. Be it
high street or designer, the young crowd dresses to party. In the city centre, the most famous live music venue is the
Cavern Club where the Beatles made their debut and which now
hosts international acts. The in-crowd follows soccer stars
and TV personalities to the many clubs and trendy
bars in the Albert Dock complex, also home to an
award-winning comedy club. The influence of the Irish community is discernible,
particularly in the names of the many traditional pubs, some
of which are worth visiting for their architectural value
alone. While there is no specific gay district, there are a
few bars and the most popular nightclub is Garlands.
For the arts, the latest attraction is FACT (Centre for film,
art and technology), a complex that houses cinemas, studios
and theatres. Classical music is performed at the
Philharmonic Hall, home of the Liverpool Philharmonic
Orchestra and the Royal Court Theatre presents a mixed
programme of concerts, plays, comedy and opera.
Pubs close at 11pm and 10.30pm on Sunday. Late-night bars
stay open until 2am and clubs until dawn and beyond
depending on their size and license.
Late night watering holes are found in the Albert
Dock complex and in the city centre clubs, which serve until
around 1am and shut at 2am. Vodka cocktails and local ales
such as Cains Dark Mild and the new tipple, Cains Finest
Lager (Liverpool Beer Festival Winner 2005) are the drinks
in vogue.
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From French to Italian, to authentic Mexican, Chinese,
Spanish and even Russian restaurants, Liverpool's culinary
offering is nothing less than impressive. Key dining areas
include Albert Dock, which has a choice of bustling
restaurants and bars offering international cuisine
and the main drag of the city centre along Lord Street,
Church Street and Bold Street.
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In addition to smart, international restaurant fare, classic
English fish and chip shops and burger bars are plentiful.
Regional dishes include hotpots and black pudding.
Standard dining hours are 12pm-10pm or 11pm Tuesday to
Saturday. Many fine restaurants close on a Monday since
fresh produce cannot be ordered on a Sunday for delivery on
Monday. Where service is not included in the bill, tips of
10 per cent are standard.
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Upmarket restaurants require advance booking and cost from
£40 per head (for three courses including wine).
Dress code is smart casual.
Housed in a converted Georgian townhouse near the Philharmonic,
this one of the city's top restaurants with an excellent
reputation for modern European food. Fresh fish a speciality.
Located in the beautiful neo-classical Pacific Chambers,
contemporary Asian cuisine is served in the basement restaurant.
The bright, airy ground floor is a cocktail bar with plush sofas.
This sophisticated modern restaurant is the Liverpool outlet of
Paul Heathcote, the Lancashire chef who made black pudding sexy.
Inspired by the classic cabaret lounges of the 1950s, this fun
venue features live jazz bands and Frank Sinatra-style crooners.
International cuisine is served from 7pm but there's also a late
supper menu on Friday and Saturday nights.
Liverpool's hottest venue combines fine food, premium cocktails
and live DJ sets in an über-cool bar furnished with
chaise-longues and cushions. The food is European and the sound
is ambient-lounge.
Do expect Liverpudlians to be very friendly and look
out for their sharp sense of humour - they are pass masters
at the straight-faced delivery of a joke. Do compliment them
on winning City of Culture 2008 and admire the regeneration
you see going on around you. Don't assume all Liverpudlians support Liverpool
Football Club - local team Everton garners plenty of support
too.
Monday to Friday 9am-5.30pm although in practice most
companies work longer hours, especially in finance.
Maritime, advertising and media, life sciences and
construction.
Water Street, Castle Street and Dale Street near the
waterfront (finance, media, advertising), city center
(service industries), Liverpool University Campus
(education).
© 2006 Whatsonwhen Ltd.