8.5
Great

Johnny Stephens Photography

Bars

Talisa Dean 04/11/22


Ticket Hall & Signal Station

A brief list of things that people tend not to look back on with nostalgia:

  1. The 1940s
  2. London public transport

Which, coincidentally, are the two exact things that the people at Cahoots have deftly woven together and bathed in wholesomely rose-tinted sentimentality via the use of cocktails, music, and highly detailed interiors. And somehow, that formula has been a roaring success.

In fact, they’ve now added not one but two new bars immediately adjacent to their original hooch-house in Kingly Court: Ticket Hall and Signal Station, just as beautifully time-warped as the first. You’ll find them sandwiched together inside a two-floor building, hidden behind an authentic-looking Kingly Court tube station edifice…

TICKET HALL

And that’s not just a name. Well, it is just a name, but it speaks to a wider theme: the space is designed to look like an actual old-fashioned ticket hall (complete with a giant station clock, and cocktails where the departures should be) that’s been used, closed down, and then repurposed as a tea room with upholstered furniture and frilly lampshades.

cahoots ticket hall

Johnny Stephens Photography

By day, that’s precisely what it is, serving up afternoon teas, and oxymoronically abundant ‘rations’; you can enjoy everything from a good ol’ Ham Grenade, to some fried courgettes with a parmesan & basil cream, and some black pudding sausage rolls with a hearty dollop of piccalilli. And on weekends, you can book in to the Bootlegger Breakout – a heady concoction of puzzle-solving and cocktail making.

In the evening things turn to cocktails, and you’ll be able to order all the Cahoots classics from the ticket booth bar, as well as some house-originals (the Been Scrumpin’ involves cider, whiskey, apple & chestnut jam, and some thoroughly intriguing mushroom liqueur)… but if you want to go down that boozy road, you’re best off locating the door plastered with no entry signs to find the slightly dilapidated staircase at the back covered in peeling vintage propaganda posters. Because it takes you down to,

SIGNAL STATION

cahoots signal station

Johnny Stephens Photography

Again, not just a name: this dimply lit cocktail bunker is styled after an actual train control room, with a maze of switches, levers, dials and flashing lights adorning the walls. There are scattered rugs, comfy armchairs, and cosy little railway-arch cubby holes set into the brickwork. The centrepiece, though, is the long bar which boasts a huge LED-embedded train control board stretching across the ceiling above it, tracking the black market that supplies the place with its liquor.

Signal Station’s lengthy offering of cocktails includes the likes of the rather punchy Elbow Grease (tequila, bergamot liqueur, kumquat & chilli syrup), and the considerably more well-mannered Pep Talk, whose strawberry & hibiscus cordial is stiffened with vodka and a little orange liqueur.

And the kicker? There’s live music every Friday…

Expect swing bands.

 

NOTE: Cahoots Ticket Hall is open daily, and the Signal Station opens on Friday & Saturday nights. You can find out more, and make a booking at their website right HERE

Cahoots Ticket Hall and Signal Station | 5 Kingly Street, W1B 5PF


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Ticket Hall & Signal Station


5 Kingly Street, Soho, W1B 5PF

020 7352 6200

8.5 | Great