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Brewers Fayre is a licensed pub restaurant chain, with 161 locations across the UK as of August 2018. [2] Owned by Whitbread , [ 3 ] Brewers Fayre restaurants are known for serving traditional British pub food and for their Sunday Carvery .
Harvester is a casual dining restaurant chain in the United Kingdom. The first, The George Inn, opened in 1983 in Morden, South London . The chain, set up by Courage Brewery to compete with Whitbread 's Beefeater restaurants and Grand Metropolitan 's Berni Inns , [ 1 ] is currently run by Mitchells & Butlers .
Brewers Fayre is a pub-restaurant brand which was created in 1979. The pubs are designed to look and feel like traditional local pubs but with a particularly strong family presence. There are around 145 pubs across the country. [50] In April 2024 Whitbread announced plans to sell 126 unprofitable Beefeater and Brewers Fayre restaurants.
However in 2006, Whitbread sold majority of its standalone sites (Beefeater and Brewers Fayre without a Premier Inn) to Mitchells & Butlers, [3] who closed all the sites and re-branded them to Harvester and Toby Carvery. Whitbread's refurbishment programme was completed in 2008; the last site was the Woolpack outside Ashford in Kent.
Chef & Brewer logo Rose and Crown, a Chef & Brewer pub, Kew, London The Bear Inn, a Chef & Brewer pub, Berkswell. The Chef & Brewer collection is a collection of over 150 licensed countryside pub restaurants in the United Kingdom, owned by Greene King.
The Kingdom Shopping Centre is an indoor retail and commercial complex in Glenrothes, located in the town centre.It is the largest indoor shopping centre in Fife and is one of the largest single-level indoor shopping centres in Scotland with around 40,000 m 2 (430,000 sq ft) of (gross) floorspace.
Glenrothes with Thornton railway station is located in Thornton in Fife, Scotland. It serves the communities of Thornton and Glenrothes . The station is managed by ScotRail and is on the Fife Circle Line , 31 + 1 ⁄ 4 miles (50.3 km) north of Edinburgh Waverley .
The streets in the original parts of the estate developed by the former Glenrothes Development Corporation were named after lochs in Scotland, for instance Affric Road and Tummel Road. The Gilvenbank Hotel, Bar and Restaurant (formerly Jaguars (1982 to 1988) and The Snooty Fox (1988 to 2006)) is also located in the area close to Gilvenbank Park.