
London's legendary Jazz Café has unveiled huge expansion plans for its Camden venue
The Columbo Group, proprietors of other London nighttime venues like Blues Kitchen, Phonox and the Old Queen's Head, has owned the venue since 2016. Earlier this year, it got its hands on neighbouring building 9 Parkway, formerly Malaysian restaurant Mamak Don, 'with the intention of refurbishing and expanding the Jazz Café and its associated functions'. Then in July, Columbo Group submitted a planning application to Camden Council, revealing its plans for the future of the venue.
The proposals include internal walls being built inside the restaurant at ground floor and basement level, which will make the space shallower and allowing the Jazz Café to extend into the back of the shop. Those new spaces would then be turned into toilets and a cloakroom, making space for larger artist green rooms in the main venue as well as more storage and back of house facilities that Columbo Group says will 'improve the visitor experience'. The upper floors of No.9 Parkway, currently used as office space, and the front of house shop will stay as they are.
In the summary of the application, Columbo Group said: 'The Columbo Group are committed to preserving the life of the Jazz Café and its status as a cultural asset to not just Camden, but London and the UK. To preserve and ensure venues are viable and self sustaining it has meant that many venues have diversified to survive. The Jazz Café remains a vibrant and busy destination venue, but requires investment and adaptation to retain its status.
'While Columbo and their design team are developing proposals for the development of No.9 Parkway, they are keen to ensure the building can be occupied and provide some much needed ancillary space for the Jazz Cafe to help with the day to day operations at the venue.'
The Jazz Café's proposed expansion is just one of several big moves happening right now for the legendary venue. The application comes just after Columbo Group put on the second edition of its spectacular Jazz Café Festival and few months after it announced that it would be turning an old art-deco theatre in east London into a new venue named Jazz Café East.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Herald Scotland
5 days ago
- The Herald Scotland
Julie Lin shares why she has 'stepped away from restaurants'
'Fusion is a symbol of strength, and it's a symbol of how people have migrated over here and created a cuisine that's powerful and gives them a means of survival,' says Julie, 'food is political, and it's always connected to the movement of people." "I think fusion got a bad name in the 80s, and 90s, which I want to try and reclaim, because fusion really explains the cuisine of Malaysia, where it's so diverse and it's made up of different cultures.' Fusion has a firm place in Scotland too. Sama Sama reads as part cookbook, part manifesto for how to bring cultures together in the kitchen. 'We have a very narrow view of authenticity,' says Julie, 'In my restaurants I would often have people who weren't Malaysian saying to me, 'that's not authentic Malaysian food'. I don't really understand what that means, because authentic Malaysian food would be going to Malaysia and eating food of Malaysian tradition. 'I want us to broaden our ideas of authenticity. I actually find it very authentic to use Scottish herbs, or samphire in a stir fry rather than bean sprouts when they're local and in season. I find that more authentic to the movement of people and how you enjoy food in different countries and climates. 'A phrase that I often hear is, 'Chinese takeaway food is not real Chinese food'. I don't think you can say that, because it would make the journeys of so many people that have emigrated from China to open Chinese takeaways and restaurants almost invalid. "That's part of immigration, where you get a hybrid cuisine of what people know how to cook and what works here. I think Chinese takeaways really epitomise that. It might be different from regional cuisine in China, but there's definitely validity to that, and strength.' (Image: Kate Seabrook) Sama Sama is a deeply personal book, interwoven with Julie's experiences of growing up mixed-race in Glasgow, starting a restaurant at a young age, and of her mum's immigration from Malaysia to Scotland to work as a NHS nurse. Every story adds a deeper understanding of ingredients, recipes and approaches to cooking. Chapters include 'Authentically in Between', exploration of the duality of Julie's cooking, and 'Learning for the Motherland' which are family recipes. Sama Sama aims to instill kitchen confidence, and encourage cooks to season 'Agak-Agak': until a dish is just right for your palate, or as Julie's cousin, quoted in the book says, 'season the dish until the ghost of our ancestors tells you to stop.' There's a chapter of solo meals: 'Cook when Nobody's Watching,' and plenty of reminders that it's always worth making something delicious just for you. Sama Sama has had a rapturous response with new fans including Nigella Lawson, whose work hugely inspired Julie as a young chef. It's also giving a voice to many people with dual heritage who have been reaching out to Julie, finding recognition in her pages: 'I was speaking to a girl who's Norwegian – Indonesian,' says Julie. 'She said now I want to try and cook a Norwegian stew with Indonesian flavours. I think that's amazing. It's really nice to hear of people doing the same thing and embracing that world of fusion.' Crucially, Julie's family in both countries are also delighted with the book. (Image: Kate Seabrook) 'My family have been so lovely,' she says, 'I got to show my Malaysian family the book when I was there for Lunar New Year. My family are a very supportive, loving bunch anyway, and the book felt like a vessel to explain how it's been being Scottish-Malaysian, a bit like a manual of how my brain works.' Having stepped away from restaurants Julie is currently in demand for pop-up food events, and on television, appearing on Channel 4's Sunday Brunch, presenting a food documentary for BBC's 'Discovering the World's Table' and becoming a frequent guest on BBC's Saturday Kitchen. 'I still have restaurants in my bones,' she says, 'but when you work in food, people expect you to work in restaurants. I want to see if there are other avenues to look into, maybe making products, and definitely book two. Finding a brilliant food community has been really important to me. So that's what this next year is going to be about, which is very exciting.' Sama Sama by Julie Lin (Ebury Press, £28) Photography by Liz Seabrook


Time Out
5 days ago
- Time Out
London's legendary Jazz Café has unveiled huge expansion plans for its Camden venue
Over its three decades of life, Camden's Jazz Café has grown into one of London's leading live music venues. As well as platforming rising stars in the genres, the 440-capacity space has played host to countless jazz and soul legends, from Amy Winehouse, Jamiroquai and D'Angelo to Pharoah Sanders, Bobby Womack and Don Cherry. Now, it has ambitions grow even bigger (literally). The Columbo Group, proprietors of other London nighttime venues like Blues Kitchen, Phonox and the Old Queen's Head, has owned the venue since 2016. Earlier this year, it got its hands on neighbouring building 9 Parkway, formerly Malaysian restaurant Mamak Don, 'with the intention of refurbishing and expanding the Jazz Café and its associated functions'. Then in July, Columbo Group submitted a planning application to Camden Council, revealing its plans for the future of the venue. The proposals include internal walls being built inside the restaurant at ground floor and basement level, which will make the space shallower and allowing the Jazz Café to extend into the back of the shop. Those new spaces would then be turned into toilets and a cloakroom, making space for larger artist green rooms in the main venue as well as more storage and back of house facilities that Columbo Group says will 'improve the visitor experience'. The upper floors of No.9 Parkway, currently used as office space, and the front of house shop will stay as they are. In the summary of the application, Columbo Group said: 'The Columbo Group are committed to preserving the life of the Jazz Café and its status as a cultural asset to not just Camden, but London and the UK. To preserve and ensure venues are viable and self sustaining it has meant that many venues have diversified to survive. The Jazz Café remains a vibrant and busy destination venue, but requires investment and adaptation to retain its status. 'While Columbo and their design team are developing proposals for the development of No.9 Parkway, they are keen to ensure the building can be occupied and provide some much needed ancillary space for the Jazz Cafe to help with the day to day operations at the venue.' The Jazz Café's proposed expansion is just one of several big moves happening right now for the legendary venue. The application comes just after Columbo Group put on the second edition of its spectacular Jazz Café Festival and few months after it announced that it would be turning an old art-deco theatre in east London into a new venue named Jazz Café East.


Daily Mail
6 days ago
- Daily Mail
Men's magazine Maxim under fire after list of 'unsexiest' women resurfaces with shocking first place
The early 2000s were a different time - and a Maxim article from 2007 listing the 'unsexiest' women has ruffled some feathers after it resurfaced and went viral. The men's magazine, which is known for featuring scantily clad celebrities, released the list nearly two decades ago. Entitled 'Unsexiest Women Alive,' the list contained five female stars and a brief description for each one explaining the reasoning behind their placement on the list. The unfortunate list was recently shared in a recent Reddit post, leaving many users horrified over who was chosen. First on the list was Sarah Jessica Parker, with the magazine claiming she was the 'least sexy woman in a group of very unsexy women' who ironically starred in a show with the word "sex" in the title, as per a Today article published at the time. 'How the hell did this [horse] Barbaro-faced broad manage to be the least sexy woman in a group of very unsexy women and still star on a show with "sex" in the title?' read Sarah Jessica's description, per Second on the list was Amy Winehouse, who died four years later, in 2011. The site mentioned 'hemorrhaging translucent skin, a rat's nest mane, and lashes that look more like surgically attached bats,' as to what landed her on the least sexy list. Third was Grey's Anatomy actress Sandra Oh, with the outlet citing her 'cold bedside manner and boyish figure.' Fourth on the list was legendary pop star Madonna, with her 'self-righteous bellyaching and rapid postnuptial deterioration' listed as reasons why. 'Combine a Paris Hilton-like pet accessorizing fetish only for dirt-poor foreign babies with a mug that looks Euro-sealed to her skull, and you've got Willem Dafoe with hot flashes,' Maxim Magazine said, as per Stuff. Number five was Britney Spears, with Maxim listing her messy private life, weight gain, and her 'losing the ability to perform' as what landed her there. The magazine slammed her for 'filling chicken-grease-stained sweatpants on the cover of every trashy tabloid and gossip blog on the Internet' and having 'gained two kids, two useless ex-husbands, and about 23 pounds of Funyun pudge,' according to Pajiba. The article was slammed at the time for it's cruel list, with many outlets reporting on it. The list appeared to be made as a joke in conjunction their Hot 100 list, which is dedicated to the 'sexiest' women of that year. In 2007, the top spots on their Hot 100 list went to Lindsay Lohan, Jessica Alba, Scarlett Johansson, and Christina Aguilera. The 'unsexiest' list has now come under fire again after it resurfaced on Reddit thread, with stunned users rushing to the comment section to share their thoughts. 'Sarah Jessica Parker has always had an amazing bod, a gorgeous smile, amazing hair, and those hypnotizing eyes,' declared one user. 'She was the freaking Lead in that show, and the whole franchise has her at the core. She is a bombshell hottie.' 'It seems that with SJP, Madonna, and Britney, they're punishing women who used their sex appeal to build their own profiles in ways that centered their own experience,' another observed. 'Then had the audacity to age, not cater to the male gaze, or gain like five pounds. Amy Winehouse also was not super traditionally feminine. 'Other than that, this list is just random gorgeous women. It's early days of men lashing out about not being centered.' 'This is a "let's pick five famously beautiful women to take down a peg" list. It's a pathetic ego trip,' slammed another. Number five was Britney Spears (seen in 2007), with the outlet slamming her messy private life, weight gain and her 'losing the ability to perform' in regards to what landed her there '[Sandra Oh] on the list because of "her cold bedside manner" - I don't know how to break it to this writer but [her Grey's Anatomy character] Cristina Yang is not a real person,' mocked someone else. 'I hate to be all 'kids today' but they truly don't understand the level of misogyny that women and girls were exposed to in the 2000s,' another shared. Sarah Jessica had spoken about how much the article upset her at the time, calling it 'brutal.' 'Am I really the unsexiest woman in the world?' she said in an interview with Grazia magazine. 'Wow! It's kind of shocking.' 'It's so brutal in a way, so filled with rage and anger,' she added. Maxim has removed the article from its website, and went on to name the Sex And The City star as its 'unexpected crush' in 2008.