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InSpiral Lounge

Coordinates:51°32′29″N0°8′47″W / 51.54139°N 0.14639°W /51.54139; -0.14639
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
London restaurant and events venue

InSpiral Lounge
Map
Interactive map of InSpiral Lounge
Restaurant information
Established16 December 2007
Closed6 January 2016
Previous ownerDominik Schnell
LocationLondon, United Kingdom

51°32′29″N0°8′47″W / 51.54139°N 0.14639°W /51.54139; -0.14639

The inSpiral Lounge and Walkers Quay inCamden Lock
InSpiral Lounge is located in Greater London
InSpiral Lounge
Map showing the location of The inSpiral Lounge in London.

TheInSpiral Lounge was anorganicvegan restaurant, eco-café and events venue inCamden Lock,Camden, London, England, overlooking theRegent's Canal andCamden Market[1] until its closure in 2016. It was the trading name ofEkopia Ltd.

History

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The inSpiral Lounge was founded by Dominik Schnell, plus a team of investors, and opened on 16 December 2007. Annabella Willink was further appointed as co-director on 15 March 2010. Since its opening, the organisation had clear policies on nutrition, environment, music and creativity. It aimed to promote mindful choices and community spirit in a laid back yet energised setting.

In the evening the venue hosted live music performances and spoken word along with DJs well known inambient electronica circles.[2] The venue regularly served as a backdrop for artwork from visionary artists. The premises were shared with Walkers Quay, which organises regular boat trips and dinners along theRegent's Canal toLittle Venice.

inSpiral Lounge evolved from a previous project, IDSpiral, which ran an organic café and a replenishing chill out area, complete with nature inspired sculptures and light installations, at festivals such asGlastonbury andThe Glade.[2]

inSpiral Lounge permanently closed to the public on 6 January 2016[3]

Food and drink

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The menu was organic andvegan, and specialised in gluten-free cuisine as well as incorporating araw food menu[4] It also included a juice and superfood smoothie bar, organic cocktail bar, medicinal mushroom infused coffees and their own range of 14 flavours of raw vegan sugar-free soft serve ice creams. In 2011 it branched out into a secondary wholesale organic living foods business making and selling a range of 33 products including kale chips, cakes, crackers, granolas andraw chocolate. They operated an online shop where amount their foods and nutritional supplement one could also pick up ambient andelectronic music CDs.[5]

It was one of the first establishments in London to provide such an offering.[6]

Music

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The venue had a built in DJ booth and hostedlive music withopen mic nights and notable DJs and performances by artists such asGaudi,Dreadzone Sound System,Carbon Based Lifeforms, Raja Ram,Banco de Gaia, Alex Patterson fromThe Orb,Ott,System 7,Eat Static, Astralasia,Mixmaster Morris, Space Tribe, Matt Black fromColdcut and TheDub Pistols.[7]

Festivals and outdoor catering

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The inSpiral Lounge provided catering, music stages and cafes at several notable events and festivals including TheGlade Festival,Glastonbury Festival, Festival of Life,Camden Green Fair,Secret Garden Party amongst others.

Awards

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In 2009 it won theArchant Food and Drink Awards for the bestTheme restaurant and bestTake-out in London.[8] It was also voted one of the top ten vegetarian restaurants in 2009 by theVegetarian Society and was nominated as Finalist in the Archant Environmental Awards as themost environmental small business category.

Capital Growth roof garden

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The inSpiral Lounge was involved with London's Capital Growth Project, an initiative run in partnership with theMayor of LondonBoris Johnson, London Food Link and theBig Lottery's Local Food Fund aiming to create 2012 new community food growing spaces across London by the end of 2012.[9] inSpiral is growing space number 93 and is in the process of building aroof garden where food for the restaurant can be grown locally rather than flown in from abroad.[10] Further to the involvement with Capital Growth, in March 2009 The inSpiral Lounge approached Boris Johnson andCamden Council directly, requesting the use of land near Hawley Wharf for development into a growing space. The request was turned down by the owner, a large Brewery and the land next to Hawley Wharf remains a derelict eyesore to this day.[11]

See also

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Portals:

References

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  1. ^Joe Fullman (26 April 2010).Frommer's London Free & Dirt Cheap. Frommer's. pp. 251–.ISBN 978-0-470-68377-4. Retrieved13 March 2011.
  2. ^abO'Brien, Siobhan., View London Review of The inSpiral Lounge, 19/08/2010
  3. ^"InSpiral on Facebook".Facebook. Archived fromthe original on 27 April 2022.[user-generated source]
  4. ^acyntha Crawley; Sam Crawley; Pam Bennett (2011).The International Raw Food Restaurant Guide. Ki Publishing. pp. 93–.ISBN 978-1-908021-00-7. Retrieved9 April 2011.
  5. ^Newman, Sarah., The Camden New Journal – The Review – RESTAURANTS The Inspiral lounge – A love and plate relationship., Published: 21 February 2008.
  6. ^"Clode, Rachel., The Ecologist, Article, What's brewing? The rise of organic beer, 1 July 2008". Archived fromthe original on 10 March 2014. Retrieved14 March 2011.
  7. ^"Gadelrap, Roisin., The Islington Tribune, Article, 22 April 2011". Archived fromthe original on 13 July 2011. Retrieved13 March 2011.
  8. ^"Archant Food & Drink Awards 2009 – Overall Winners". Archived fromthe original on 21 March 2012. Retrieved13 March 2011.
  9. ^BBC News Article – Londoners urged to grow own food, Tuesday, 4 November 2008
  10. ^Capital Growth Website – Growing Space 93
  11. ^Paygon, Paul., The Camden New Journal, Letters to the Editor, 5 March 2009.

External links

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Restaurants inLondon
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Defunct
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