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Lowlander, WC2

36 Drury Lane
WC2
WC2B 5RR

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Reviews (Current Rating Average: of 10) Add Review see review guidelines


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


Just a quick pint, then I'm off left this review about Lowlander

Continental-style table-service café / bar with no real ale but plenty of interesting Belgian and Dutch beers from an impressive line of 15 craft keg taps (with a good bottled selection available too). Plenty of Low Countries breweriana around the high-ceilinged bar. Cluttered with tables, but there is also a small mezzanine area and a limited amount of pavement seating too. Nine regular beers and six more changing guests, including Triple d'Anvers (£5.45, half) and Kasteel Rouge (£5.35, half) plus a Lervik from further afield on this visit. So, very expensive, but worth a visit if you are in the area and looking for something a bit different.

On 20th August 2022 - rating: 7
[User has posted 8117 recommendations about 8117 pubs]


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


Rex Rattus left this review about Lowlander

It's still much as described by the previous reviewer. What struck me as I entered was the rows of regimented tables and chairs in the room. The available space was maximised here. I was also invited to sit at a table and receive the benefit of table service, but being the contrary old git that I am I chanced my arm and pretended I was in a pub and went up to the bar to be served. They didn't seem to have a problem with that.

There's no real ale of course, but I noticed a couple of Tiny Rebel beers on tap and as I really like their real ales I ordered a half of their Baby Bock. I was served in a foreign looking class, and actually got 33cl of beer - perhaps that's what they understand a half to be in here. I didn't get much change from a fiver either. Anyway, it tasted fine as long as you like hoppy beers, but was obviously too cold and too fizzy. They do food here, and saw something called "moule" advertised, and as a very swift glance at the menu revealed that a fish finger sandwich was over £9 I didn't bother to look any further.

I thought this was a fairly ordinary, if expensive, bar so I guess they've got the Lowlands feel right. I'm sure that having satisfied my curiosity this was a one-off visit.

On 2nd June 2018 - rating: 4
[User has posted 2606 recommendations about 2520 pubs]


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


Pub SignMan left this review about Lowlander

Just a short walk down Drury Lane from Covent Garden, the Lowlander is, as its name suggests, a bar specialising in food and drink from the Low Countries. Comprising a single, large, bare boarded room with the servery down the left hand side, the bulk of the pub has been filled with standard tables and chairs ideal for those wanting to sample the food. There is a red and cream colour scheme of the sort you might encounter in any traditional pub, but the difference soon becomes apparent when you view the collection of Belgian beer adverts and logos hung or painted on the walls. Three rows of long tables fill the middle of the room with some padded banquettes along the perimeter, giving the place a feel somewhere between a small drinking hall and a restaurant. Large windows on two sides, with frosted panes depicting some of the beers available within, provide plenty of light, although there is a darker, cosier area in the rear corner, where you can find more banquette seating, lots of photos on display and plenty more breweriana. Above this is an upper gallery, seemingly out of use on this visit, which looks down over the bulk of the pub and offers more padded banquette and chair seating. This upper level means that the whole pub has a very high ceiling and accordingly the bar back is also pretty vast, with a most impressive display of bottles arranged across it.
There are no hand pumps on the bar, but a long row of fifteen keg fonts dispensing a varied range of Belgian beers compensates. Most styles were covered and several beers were home branded, so I decided to try the Lowlander Wit Beer which set me back a remarkable £3.00 for a half pint. The keg range is supplemented by a comprehensive bottled range, detailed at great length in a menu located on each table. Classic Dutch and Belgian bar snacks are available alongside a more comprehensive main menu and table service seems to be the norm throughout, although the friendly staff had no problem with me taking up a table without eating.
I thought this was a fairly nice place that suffers as a result of its location, the result of which is a transient customer base and super-inflated prices. Fans of Belgian beers may be able to tick off a few rarer items in here, but for the whole pub-going package, I prefer De Hems in Chinatown.

On 17th June 2014 - rating: 5
[User has posted 3114 recommendations about 3114 pubs]


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


Quinno _ left this review about Lowlander

Belgian (and apparently Dutch) themed drinking barn on Drury Lane, near Theatreland. Fairly unlovely opened-out interior but saved a bit by oodles of Belgian beer ephemera. The piped Britpop soundtrack wasn’t necessarily adding to the ambience unhelped by the echoey high ceiling (not much you can do about the latter I suppose). Lots of food being sold and the rigid long table seating arrangement reminded me somewhat of a Wagamama restaurant. An upstairs room was not open which seemed a strange decision on a busy Saturday evening. Of note was an impressive bar back display of bottles. Beer-wise, a long bank of Belgian keg plus a plethora of bottles in fridges. Flummoxed by the choice, I asked the barman for a half of ‘something dark’ from the keg range and ended up with a Troubadour Obscura at a debatable price of £3.90. I didn’t really warm to the place, the Belgian USP aside it isn’t one I’d imagine heading back to in a hurry. The Dovetail in Clerkenwell does the Benelux job better in my view.

On 10th June 2014 - rating: 6
[User has posted 5099 recommendations about 5082 pubs]


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


Steve of N21 left this review about Lowlander

Lowlander is a Dutch and Belgian beer bar / café situated on Drury lane opened in 2001
Impressive range of some 15 chrome beer dispensers along the bar top and then an extensive collection of bottled beers available, although they looked more Belgium than Dutch to me.
The usual Trappist and Monastery beers are supported by a decent range of blonde beers, golden ales, Lambics and Flemish Red ales. But a lot are 6% and upwards and the 8%+ beers will set you back in excess of £5.50 a glass.
So a good choice of beers, but I wasn’t taken by the layout of the place, one square space mainly laid to tables in lines across, and couldn’t work out if it was trying to be a bar, a restaurant or a café, especially as there was an extensive food menu available with mains in the £15.00 area, but the ambience was more of a corner café and not conducive of a restaurant where I would be expecting to pay that food ticket price.
Anyway, we managed to get a corner table and wiled away a bit of time over a decent Flemish red, and consoled the pain in my wallet with the fact that we were watching the world go by a stone’s throw from Covent Garden.

On 12th April 2012 - rating: 6
[User has posted 2111 recommendations about 1992 pubs]