Suka in London Restaurant

Suka in London restaurant offers modern authentic Malaysian cuisine prepared with a sensibility to the European palate. Created by New York chef Zak Pelaccio, Suka's menu of fresh British and Malaysian produce marries French cooking techniques with the intensity of Southeast Asian flavours.

Set on the ground floor of Sanderson, Suka's dramatic setting has been redesigned by the renowned Paris-based architect and designer India Mahdavi. Suka has a relaxed and casual ethos, while still capturing the wit and airy elegance of Sanderson.

The menu is served in typical Asian sharing style and includes dishes ranging from home-style to haute cuisine French-Malaysian style.

Long Bar

At some 80-feet in length, Sanderson's well known and glamourous Long Bar is a social hot-pot for residents and W1's urban professional set. Long Bar is light, white and airy and radiates freshness and joie de vivre. Classic and innovative cocktails fill the seasonally changing menu, with guests also being able to enjoy the ultimate burger with a selection of varying garnishes, charcuterie and mezze sharing plates. Either sit around the bar people-watching or relax in the sanctuary of the Courtyard.

Courtyard Garden

The inner Courtyard Garden is a lush open-air oasis brimming with flowering trees, fountains, mosaics and is organised around a reflecting pool. Guests can drink, dine or simply relax in this private sanctuary.

Purple Bar

The Purple Bar is a chic and intimate lounge that has become one of London's hottest gathering places. The space is theatrical and sumptuously draped in violet silk opera curtains and furnished with lavender Queen Anne chairs. With its coolly lit rock texture the bar itself looks like an enormous meteorite just fallen from the sky. Purple Bar offers 10oz Martinis as well as a selection of 3oz classic Martinis, all of which are based on the original Martini 'The Martinez' dating back to 1860.

Billiard Room

The Billiard Room at Sanderson in London features an antique silver-leafed billiard table and whimsically out-of-place, lodge-like antler furniture – a humourous reference to the fact that a billiard room is arguably more at home in a Scottish Laird's castle than a chic London 5 star hotel! At the rear of this fun room is a cathedral-like and stunning 1950s stained glass by John Piper, one of the most noted 20th century British Abstract artists. The Tate gallery houses an astounding 182 works by John Piper who helpfully explained of Abstract Art, 'Abstraction is the way to the heart — it is not the heart itself.'

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