place

The Hand & Flowers

2005 establishments in EnglandGastropubs in EnglandMarlow, BuckinghamshireMichelin Guide starred restaurants in the United KingdomRestaurants established in 2005
Restaurants in Buckinghamshire
The Hand & Flowers Marlow in 2014
The Hand & Flowers Marlow in 2014

The Hand & Flowers is a gastropub in Marlow, Buckinghamshire that opened in 2005. Owned and operated by Tom Kerridge and his wife Beth Cullen-Kerridge, it gained its first Michelin star within a year of opening and a second in the 2012 list, making it the first pub to hold two Michelin stars. It was named the AA Restaurant of the Year for 2011–12.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article The Hand & Flowers (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

The Hand & Flowers
West Street,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address External links Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: The Hand & FlowersContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.56981 ° E -0.78334 °
placeShow on map

Address

The Hand & Flowers

West Street 126
SL7 2BP
England, United Kingdom
mapOpen on Google Maps

linkWikiData (Q7738706)
linkOpenStreetMap (214810835)

The Hand & Flowers Marlow in 2014
The Hand & Flowers Marlow in 2014
Share experience

Nearby Places

Marlow Bridge
Marlow Bridge

Marlow Bridge is a road traffic and foot bridge over the River Thames in England between the town of Marlow, Buckinghamshire and the village of Bisham in Berkshire. It crosses the Thames just upstream of Marlow Lock, on the reach to Temple Lock. The bridge is a Grade I listed building.There has been a bridge on the site since the reign of King Edward III which was stated in around 1530 to have been of timber, though an original crossing to the Knights Templar of Bisham may date from 1309. In 1642 this bridge was partly destroyed by a Parliamentarian army. In 1789 a new timber bridge was built by public subscription with a contribution from the Thames Navigation Commission to increase the headroom underneath. The current suspension bridge was designed by William Tierney Clark and was built between 1829 and 1832, replacing a wooden bridge further downstream which collapsed in 1828. The Széchenyi Chain Bridge, spanning the River Danube in Budapest, was also designed by William Tierney Clark and it is a larger scale version of Marlow bridge. In 1965, the bridge was restored. It has a 3 tonne weight restriction and is used only by foot and local road traffic. Other traffic is carried by the Marlow By-pass Bridge. On 24 September 2016, a 37-tonne Lithuanian haulage lorry attempted to pass over the bridge, requiring it to be closed for two months to allow Buckinghamshire County Council to undertake a series of stress tests on the suspension bridge hangers and pins, together with ultrasound and magnetic particle tests. No significant damage to the bridge was found, and it was reopened on Friday 25 November following restoration of sections exposed for weld testing with three coats of paint, removal of scaffolding surrounding the bridge's two towers, and reinstatement of timber work removed for inspection.