The Bricklayers Arms, Putney, SW15
32 Waterman Street
SW15
SW15 1DD
Phone: 02087890222
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21st Jan 2015, 13:01
Review submitted by
train manmore
ReviewClosed yesterday for 'emergency repairs'? Check before travelling.
22 January 2008
Still hit & miss re selection on offer, just Landlord, Golden Best & RamTam today, no guests. Landlord was very good, but £3!
8 November 2007
Yesterday's visit was much more like it for beer choice - 4 TTs, incl RamTam, plus Downton Mad Hare & Brewster's Belle de Jour (although I wasn't keen on the latter). Also listed in the gents (but oddly nowhere else in the pub) was the forthcoming range of guests – incl 4 from RCH brewery, 2 from Butts Organic, as well as Daleside Porter & Museum White Shield. Sounds good to me; rating rectified to a comfortable 8.
1 November 2007
A very good pub but disappointing beer selection on my last two visits, with last week only 3 and yesterday only 2 pumps in action from a possible 10 (Landlord & ‘Pumpkin' ale); hardly a justification of Camra's London 'pub of the year'!
15th Nov 2013, 17:52
Review submitted by
Aqualung .more
ReviewNot having been to Putney for well over twenty years it is unsurprising that I hadn't visited this famous pub as it was originally a Watney's house. According to an old SW London beer guide there is a rumour that the Great Train Robbery was planned here. There's not much to say about the building that hasn't already been said. It's a typical small wooden floored ale house with twelve handpumps. On my Thursday lunchtime visit nine were in use with three Dark Star, two Hobson's, Downton Chocolate Orange Delight, Mayfield Priory, Milton Tiki and Mulberry Duck Gold Sparkle. I went for the Downton beer (£3.80) which despite sounding like an item of confectionery was not at all sweet for the strength.
Places like this are always worth a visit and I would definitely return.
9th Sep 2013, 21:46
Review submitted by
paulof horshammore
ReviewI've not been here for a few years, but I enjoyed my return just as much as I'd expected. 12 hand pumps: 1 for cider, 1 turned and the rest dominated by Oakham and Dark Star. I tried more than one and all were in great nick (I'd have preferred the Inferno to have been a degree or two cooler on a hot afternoon, but it didn't stay long in the glass even so).
This is very much an ale-drinkers haven so, if you're expecting Fosters, Carling and the like, you're going to be disappointed (or pleasantly surprised, perhaps). The taps serve up beers from Freedom and Meantime, including their own lagers.
As mentioned in recent reviews below, The Bricklayers wasn't as busy as I'm sure the management would have wished, but it filled up throughout my stay and all the tables outside became occupied, with reservations noted on some inside as well.
Still one of London's best on the strength of this call, and I can see no reason not to make a return visit in the near future.
3rd Apr 2013, 22:55
Review submitted by
john graymore
ReviewNot as busy as it was a few years ago when it had the Taylors beers on.Still a good friendly pub with 8 northern beers on my visit..One of the best in Putney.
13th Oct 2012, 19:39
Review submitted by
Quinno _more
ReviewSought this one out specially after hearing the hype surrounding it from elsewhere and the awards being thrown its way from the local CAMRA branch. This is a freehouse selling Tim Taylor beers alongside the odd guest or two (Sambrooks Wandle on my visit). Situated up a small backstreet behind a local authority housing block, it was apparently a former boat storage building (hence the long narrow interior I suppose?) and was slated for demolition a number of years ago. The interior seemed a little stark to me, with wooden flooring, scrubbed wooden furniture and a combination of wood panelled and bare-brick walls, however the black and white prints of old Putney were interesting. It was a cold and damp day outside so I settled myself by a welcome fire, though I noticed the pub was still quite cold). The place could have done with a bit more light lift the drab grey afternoon atmosphere too. After settling down I found that I wasn’t overly enamoured with either of my two halves. They weren’t bad but weren’t anywhere near as good as those served up in the Red Lion in Isleworth (my other pub visit earlier that day). The also much-praised friendly welcome was absent, just a young female seemingly going through the motions. There were only four other punters.
For such a well-anointed pub I trudged back out into the bleak late afternoon feeling mighty disappointed. I really hope I caught it on a bad day. Overall it isn’t a bad little place but I was expecting so much more.
6th Aug 2011, 12:45
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