Belmayne

"Celebrity designer Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen was on a mission to make suburbia sexy in his designs for the new landmark development of Belmayne"

The White Book 2007

Greenwich Park Bar & Grill

"A chilled-out venue... (Greenwich Park Bar and Grill) has a secluded patio, a green and white colour scheme and an American influenced menu to keep customers cool during the promised hot summer."

Class magazine, June 2005

"This newcomer is a breath of fresh air for Greenwich. Bright decor takes its cue from neighbouring Greenwich Park, whose entrance it overlooks: pale green walls, hand-painted murals, signage depicting plants and flowers, neat rattan seating, and light-fittings that seem to come straight off the trees outside. And there's plenty to attract the park-going crowds".

http://www.squaremeal.co.uk

Holiday Inn Room

"The country's best known television dandy, Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen, was at it again yesterday. This time he was showing off changeable walls of art, with images ranging from beaches to monumental works of architecture, as well as glowing fibre-optic carpets in a bid to put the Holiday Inn chain at the vanguard of hotel design."

Caroline Roux, The Guardian, October 6th 2004

Inc Bar

"For many, I am sure, I will be committing the most heinous sin imaginable this month. I have invoked the spirit of LLB - as he branded himself very successfully - because, I am afraid, he has turned in a pretty fine interior. Subtle it ain't. Sophisticated? Nope. What it is, is fun, exuberant, colourful...a good, roaring, bell laugh of an interior."

Garry Mason, Editorial, idFX, April 2004

"Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen might just throw off his quick-fix TV image by designing a commercial project full of exuberance, decadence, colour...and a nice line in pornographic wallpaper".

idFX 2004

"Does this venue have destination toilets? The ladies' loo has baby-pink wallpaper, mother-of-pearl mosaics, ornate silver mirrors, a wrought-iron fireplace. Not a look I would normally choose, but hell, I almost felt like moving in."

Sejal Sukhadwaia, Time Out London, March 31st 2004