which is really important.
“Once we employed Nico, it's just been brilliant. We’ve bounced off each other with dishes, ideas, and he's going to be the driving force of driving the team, making sure that we're consistent, building that sort of camaraderie.
“We're an open kitchen as well. Working in an open kitchen at Solstice, it's important that we have this nice environment. We're clean, we work efficient, but we're happy.
“When we have happy faces and happy chefs, then the food comes across as being happy as well and we want the guests to really, really see that.”

He continued: “This space, we want it to be busy. We've got a beautiful 75 to 100 cover cocktail bar. That's just going to be somewhere you can come after work, pre-drink or even if you're a hotel guest, pop down and just sit and have a cocktail and just watch the world go by.
“We're going to be open Tuesday to Sunday, lunch and dinner, closed Sunday nights.
“We want to be busy, a 100-cover+ restaurant, which is important because we have an amazing space.
“But when this place is going to be full, it's going to be an amazing energy. You've got natural sunlight coming from all angles of the city.
“It's a unique set-up. I just could not say no to this opportunity.”

How Solaya differs from Kenny’s Michelin-starred Newcastle restaurants
Kenny has very much made a name for himself in the city of Newcastle.
Asked how different it feels to be opening up in London, he said: “This opening feels a lot more relaxed in a funny way.
“House of Tides and Solstice was done by myself and my wife Abbie, where we had no financial backing. Everything was on our own shoulders.
“With the art’otel, there's some serious backers there that can help with the financial side of it, the recruitment side, which takes a lot of pressure off me as a restaurateur.
“That allows me to simply just focus on the food, the training and the whole deliverance of hospitality that we want to deliver for Solaya.”
He added: “I think the rewarding part of it is being part of something new, exciting, meeting new people, work with new chefs that I would never come across before and doing a cuisine that I wouldn't normally do.
“The restaurants in Newcastle are very fine dining, very Michelin driven. This, we're not looking for accolades, we just want great food, great hospitality. So that bit's been really exciting.”

friends in high places
And for avid Newcastle United fan Kenny, the opportunity to watch the Magpies live in London is something he is very much eyeing up as an added bonus.
“Absolutely. I’ve got some good friends in London, who work at Arsenal and Tottenham, so I’ll be tapping them up for some free tickets,” he said.
“Even if I’ve got to go and commis for them in the kitchens behind the scenes, I’ll be going to some free games for sure!”
