Long-standing
establishment Café Cairo sits tucked away on Landor Road, in that stretch
between Brixton and Clapham that both stake a claim in.
Behind a
red façade, Café Cairo opens out across two floors; beyond the bar is a
sprawling courtyard of tented corners, hand-crafted Egyptian dividers, plump
lounging cushions and a pizza oven.
Café Cairo
opened its doors in 1996, the creation of former BBC reporter David Lodge.
After travelling to Egypt for work, David fell in love with the culture and
brought it back to the UK in the early 90s as a tent in Glastonbury. The
current space, built by David himself, remains not just a bar but a community
hub for artists; a live theatre stage, a belly dancing studio, a cinema.
"David
was doing this in London before anyone else was: mixing café, nightlife, culture,”
bar manager Aaron Molloy told me over Brixton Electric IPAs.
Everything
you see in Café Cairo has been built by David, Aaron and girlfriend Rhiannon
Parry (also David's partner in business) – it's all DIY, recycled and
eco-friendly.
Rhiannon
said: "It’s literally our blood sweat and tears, this creation. It's
always been a labour of love."
The bar burnt
down on 4th November
2007 in what the couple still think was an act of arson. They closed for four
years, a group of them keeping the name alive through Café Cairo Events;
designing and decorating spaces for parties – a house party here, a church in Nunhead
there. But the call of Cairo was strong and they spent a year rebuilding it
from the ground up.
Rhiannon
said: "It was all still here like a ghost town, just sitting here for four
years covered in dust and ash."
Current
Café Cairo serves only locally-sourced drinks with all mixers homemade from
scratch.
"We
believe if you have better alcohol you get intoxicated in a better way, you get
happier" explained Aaron. "With organic ingredients there’s no
sulphites which are what give you a headache."
They're
more than happy for you to come and drink mint tea at midnight, too, or tuck
into vegan chocolate and vegan pizzas.
Aaron and
Rhiannon want to promote the eclectic range of events the café hosts; from
their "wild" Halloween party, to BeLLy BoX, a small cabaret night
with hand-picked "very odd, but brilliant" acts.
"All
different types of people come through the arch," said Aaron. "You
don’t want to stay at home? Come to Cairo. You want to go partying but you’re a
bit too scared of big crowds? Come to Cairo. You just want to hang out and
watch a film? Come to Cairo."
Rhiannon
added: "We’re not trying to be original, we just want people to know that
Cairo has been in Brixton for so long. People need to know that there are
places in Brixton from “back in the day” that are still here. We’re still here,
we’re still going, come check us out!"
Facebook:
Café Cairo
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