Kennington: celebrity party zone with Cara Delevingne and Rita Ora

We may be a little late in covering the #DKNYArtworks party that took place at the old Lambeth Fire Station on Whitgift Street earlier this summer, but we have good reason: we pride ourselves on lack of hype here, and we wanted to make sure that when we said that Kennington hosted this summer’s hottest party, nothing was going to trump that. Now in mid-August, it’s safe to say that SE11 can take the crown, after a night that featured Cara Delevingne stagebombing Rita Ora’s set (attempting a duet and showing off her very own take on the twerk), and appearances from an array of London’s bright youngish things including Eliza Doolittle, Henry Holland, Nick Grimshaw, Professor Green, Millie Mackintosh, and Bella Freud.

DKNY Artworks Launch, London, Britain - 12 Jun 2013

The old Lambeth Fire Station is part of an historically important fire brigade complex, sitting just behind a fire practice tower, and the more architecturally remarkable art deco moderne London Fire Brigade Headquarters on the Albert Embankment.

The Old Fire Station - kenningtonrunoff.com

Kennington architecture in the Royal Academy’s Summer Exhibition

This week is the last week of the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition. Its architecture section features the design of the new building where the Florence Nightingale pub and concrete monstrosity York House used to be on the roundabout at the bottom of Westminster Bridge. What’s being built in their place is a “glistening, crystalline 18-storey landmark office building” in an area already ripe with redevelopment – there are three relatively new Park Plaza hotels nearby including two on the roundabout, plus Foster & Partners’ new towers on Albert Embankment.

In the Summer Exhibition you can also see some of the alternative designs that were considered for York House, but this was the chosen design:

York House by Sheppard Robson in the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition - kenningtonrunoff.com

Studio 180

NME cover stars Palma Violets rehearse at, and played their first ever gig at, Studio 180 on Lambeth Road. This is a house owned by Network Rail that has been converted into artists’ studios by the team behind Make Space Studios. Occasionally it plays host to gigs which are always rammed and atmospheric, not least thanks to the punch that is served. There are also yoga classes and not particularly private parties. It’s cool.

Studio 180 - kenningtonrunoff.com