House of Tides






House of Tides occupies a 16th-century merchant's house on Newcastle's Quayside, where flagstone floors and carved beams frame a Michelin-starred tasting menu rooted in Modern British technique. Kenny Atkinson's flagship has held its star since 2014 and ranks among the most consistently reviewed fine-dining rooms in the north of England, with La Liste placing it at 82 points in 2026.
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- Address
- 28-30 Close, Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 3RF, United Kingdom
- Phone
- +44 191 230 3720
- Website
- houseoftides.co.uk

Stone, Timber, and the Weight of the Quayside
The approach along Newcastle's Close tells you something before you've sat down. The stretch of road running parallel to the Tyne, between the Swing Bridge and the Tyne Bridge, is one of the older surviving sections of the city's riverside, a place where medieval warehousing gives way to Georgian stonework in uneven sequence. The building that holds House of Tides is of that world: a 16th-century former merchant's house whose flagstone floors, cast iron pillars, and exposed brickwork on the ground floor have not been softened for the contemporary dining trade. The atmosphere downstairs reads closer to a historic counting house than a modern restaurant, which is precisely what makes it an interesting frame for ambitious Modern British cooking.
This tension between inherited structure and contemporary culinary ambition runs through the broader story of fine dining in England's provincial cities. In places like Newcastle, where a serious restaurant culture has taken decades to build critical mass, the decision about where to locate a flagship carries weight. The Quayside was a natural answer: historic, photogenic, and central enough to draw visitors from across the region without feeling like a tourist concession. House of Tides has become part of the Quayside's identity in a way that newer openings in less characterful spaces cannot easily replicate.
A Tasting Menu in Conversation with Tradition
Modern British cooking, at its most considered, operates in the space between two obligations: faithfulness to the seasonal produce and culinary inheritance of these islands, and the freedom to reconfigure both through contemporary technique. The format at House of Tides is a tasting menu without a la carte choice, which is a commitment to that second obligation. The kitchen decides the sequence; the diner accepts or modifies for dietary reasons. Vegetarians are accommodated with a dedicated menu rather than an afterthought substitution, which places the venue in a more thoughtful bracket than many of its regional peers.
Dishes documented in critical inspection reports illustrate the kitchen's approach: a venison tartare combined with smoked beetroot and pickled shimeji mushrooms; a stone bass preparation with salsify, dill, and a lemon verbena gel described in one review as producing an eye-opening intensity; a duck course built around squash and hen of the woods mushrooms. These are constructions that require technical layering, and the kitchen's tendency to build multiple components into each plate reflects a confidence that can shade into complexity for its own sake. Critical reviews have noted both the flashes of brilliance and the occasional question of whether every element earns its place. That critical candour is, in its own way, a trust signal: House of Tides is receiving the kind of rigorous attention that matters.
The Sunday Feast menu represents a different register, offering a refined approach to the traditional Sunday roast at a price point that brings the cooking within reach of a broader audience. That the kitchen can credibly occupy both formats, a weekday tasting menu calibrated for Michelin-level precision and a Sunday format that speaks to established British dining tradition, says something about the range expected of a regional flagship.
Where House of Tides Sits in the Newcastle Fine-Dining Tier
Newcastle's serious dining options have grown considerably since House of Tides opened, but the competitive set remains distinct. At the leading end, Solstice by Kenny Atkinson, the younger sibling restaurant and immediate neighbour, has attracted attention that some reviewers now position ahead of the original flagship. That internal competition within the same ownership group is unusual and speaks to the momentum Atkinson has built on the Quayside specifically. The awards data reflects the dynamic: House of Tides holds a Michelin star (confirmed 2024), ranked 535th in Opinionated About Dining's European list in 2025 (down from 315th in 2024), and scored 82 points with La Liste in 2026.
Elsewhere in the city, 21 operates at a lower price point with Modern British cooking in a more accessible register. Broad Chare represents the Traditional British end of the spectrum at a more democratic price tier. Dobson & Parnell occupies the Modern Cuisine bracket at £££, and Cook House brings a more casual Modern British sensibility to the mix. House of Tides remains one of Newcastle's most distinguished dining rooms, with no direct local peer at its level.
Against the broader national picture, the comparison set becomes more demanding. Restaurants like L'Enclume in Cartmel, Moor Hall in Aughton, and Winteringham Fields represent the tier of northern English fine dining that carries multiple Michelin stars and higher OAD rankings. House of Tides operates with one star and, currently, a mid-table European ranking, which is the honest competitive context. It is not positioned alongside The Fat Duck in Bray, The Ledbury in London, or Kitchen Table at the apex of Modern British cooking. What it does offer is a Michelin-starred experience in a city where that tier has no equivalent, inside a building of genuine historic character, with a kitchen that produces technically serious food and a service culture described consistently as warm rather than formal.
The Physical Experience: Two Floors, Two Registers
The ground floor at House of Tides functions as a bar and anteroom, where guests typically arrive before moving upstairs for the meal itself. The flagstone floor, cast iron pillars, and exposed brickwork make this space feel genuinely old rather than atmospherically manufactured, a distinction that matters more than it might seem in a decade when heritage aesthetics have become a standard toolkit for restaurant designers. The first-floor dining room shifts register: wooden flooring, modern art on white walls, and sloping ceilings with carved beams that remind you of the building's age without dominating the experience. The physical character of the upper room has been described by multiple reviewers as capacious, this is not an intimate counter-dining experience, but a full restaurant in a historic shell.
The Quayside address adds a further layer of context. The proximity to the Tyne Bridge, the historic warehousing of the Close, and the river itself mean that arriving at House of Tides involves engaging with one of Newcastle's most atmospheric pieces of urban geography, particularly in the evening. That is not a manufactured asset, it belongs to the city, and the restaurant benefits from it.
Planning Your Visit
House of Tides operates Wednesday from 5 PM to 9 PM, Thursday to Saturday from 12 PM to 2 PM and 5 PM to 9 PM, and Sunday from 12 PM to 4 PM. The kitchen is closed Monday and Tuesday. The format is tasting menu without a la carte choice, except on Sunday. Given the Michelin star and the volume of coverage the restaurant has accumulated, booking well in advance is advisable, particularly for Friday and Saturday dinner service. Kenny Atkinson's public profile, built through appearances on Great British Menu and Saturday Kitchen, ensures that national visibility feeds into reservation demand from outside the region.
The price tier is ££££, which positions House of Tides at the premium end of the local spend curve. The Google rating of 4.6 across 585 reviews reflects consistent satisfaction at that price point, with praise often directed at the combination of technical cooking and an atmosphere described as friendly and unstuffy rather than stiff or ceremonial.
Comparable Modern British cooking at different price points and formats can be found at Gidleigh Park in Chagford and Hand and Flowers in Marlow for those travelling more widely.
Recognition, Side-by-Side
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| House of TidesThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Modern British Fine Dining | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | |
| SOLSTICE BY KENNY ATKINSON | Modern British Fine Dining | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | Quayside |
| COOK HOUSE | Modern British Small Plates | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Ouseburn |
| Six | Modern British Fine Dining | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Quayside |
| The Small Canteen | Modern British Bistro | $$ | Sandyford | |
| Blackfriars | Modern British in Historic Setting | $$$ | City Centre |
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Rustic character with flagged floors, exposed brickwork, cast iron pillars, sloping floors, and wonky ceilings in a historic quayside building; laid-back yet effortlessly stylish atmosphere.














