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Britain's oldest Indian restaurant to battle eviction order in court

Britain's oldest Indian restaurant to battle eviction order in court
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Britain's oldest Indian restaurant to battle eviction order in court Veeraswamy, the UK's oldest Indian restaurant, is taking legal action against the Crown Estate in a bid to remain on London's Regent Street The UK’s oldest Indian restaurant is set to take the Crown Estate to court in a bid to remain in its historic home on London’s Regent Street. Veeraswamy, located in Victory House near Piccadilly Circus since 1926, is at risk of being evicted after the Crown Estate refused to renew its...

Britain's oldest Indian restaurant to battle eviction order in court Veeraswamy, the UK's oldest Indian restaurant, is taking legal action against the Crown Estate in a bid to remain on London's Regent Street The UK’s oldest Indian restaurant is set to take the Crown Estate to court in a bid to remain in its historic home on London’s Regent Street. Veeraswamy, located in Victory House near Piccadilly Circus since 1926, is at risk of being evicted after the Crown Estate refused to renew its £205,000-a-year lease last year. The Michelin-starred restaurant has served the likes of Winston Churchill, Vivien Leigh, Marlon Brando, Laurence Olivier, Charlie Chaplin and Queen Elizabeth II. The estate has it wants to carry out a "comprehensive refurbishment" of the office space on the building’s upper floors, which have been empty since a basement flood in 2023 that did not affect the restaurant. Planning applications submitted to Westminster City Council show works would involve removing the wall separating Veeraswamy’s ground-floor entrance from the office entrance, creating a larger reception area for office tenants. This would allow the estate to "materially increase" the rents charged to new tenants, The Caterer reports. Speaking to specialist outlet Restaurant earlier this year, Ranjit Mathrani, co-owner of Veeraswamy's parent company MW Eat, accused the Crown Estate of refusing to engage in a "meaningful and constructive manner" and said the company would be willing to close for several months to allow refurbishment work. "We have also suggested that their experts meet with ours to explore a solution, but they now say they have done all the necessary research and that a meeting would be pointless," Mathrani told the outlet. "This is truly astonishing and unreasonable. They present themselves as responsible landlords, but that is simply untrue. They have not behaved responsibly towards us." The Times reported that Veeraswamy has proposed sharing the larger entrance and matching whatever rent the Crown Estate believes it can charge, but that this has been refused. A spokesperson for the Crown Estate said: "We need to carry out a comprehensive refurbishment of Victory House to both bring it up to modern standards, and into full use. "We understand how disappointing this is for MW Eat and have offered help to find new premises on our portfolio so that the restaurant can stay in the West End as well as financial compensation. "The Crown Estate has a statutory responsibility to manage its land and property to create long term value for the UK and return its profit to the UK Government for public spending. "This is not a decision we’ve taken lightly. With external advice, we have reviewed alternative proposals including those put forward by MW Eat, and unfortunately there isn’t an alternate scheme which meets our responsibilities as stewards of this heritage listed building, our legal obligations and our responsibilities to manage public money."
Britain (LOCATION) Indian (ORG) Veeraswamy (ORG) UK (LOCATION) the Crown Estate (ORG) London (LOCATION) Regent Street (LOCATION) Victory House (LOCATION) Piccadilly Circus (ORG) Crown Estate (ORG) Michelin (ORG) Winston Churchill (PERSON) Vivien Leigh (PERSON) Marlon Brando (PERSON) Laurence Olivier (PERSON)
Originally published by Daily Mirror Read original →