Ocean Drive Living Winchester

ocean drive living

Ocean Drive Living is a fabulous haven for beautiful, fresh and contemporary items for your entire world. From house to garden with kitchen, dining and entertaining being the main focus. Think style and you have it here in a nutshell. The shop has stunning textiles pilled all around, glorious cushions that will have you bedside yourself with joy. You won’t be able to resist a purchase I am sure.

Ocean Drive LivingIMG_1100IMG_1103Dog lovers will smile at the array of cute tea towels and fun offerings. Mugs, jugs and all sorts of fun, amazing and very practical gadgets are on display. Its a perfect place to pick up a truly amazing gift for someone special.IMG_1106IMG_1108Stunning non drip candles….Yep non drip candles you heard right, and the designer wooden sunglasses have to be our favourite items we discovered.
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Instantly you feel carried away on a holiday to the Caribbean and at the same time the beauty of the New Forest seeps through. Winchester couldn’t ask for a more tremendous, sophisticated and oh so à la mode new lifestyle shop. Its distinctly New England but has a touch of warmth throughout the entire well merchandised household boutique. This is interior design at its best.IMG_1131IMG_1134IMG_1135IMG_1136IMG_1137IMG_1138IMG_1139IMG_1142IMG_1143IMG_1146IMG_1148

Handpicked and ravishing accessories for you, your home and your garden are just a hop skip and jump away if you live in Hampshire. Ocean Drive Living only stock the top brands such as Skagerak, Culinary Concepts and By Nord blend with up and coming names such as Fenella Smith, Lily Matthews, Finnsdottir and Scantilla.

One place to defiantly visit if you are craving that perfect clean, fresh and opulent lifestyle you have always dreamt of.

Ocean Drive Living, 71 Parchment Street, Winchester, SO23 8AT. Tel: 01962 864 111 Follow them on Twitter @ODLWinchester  or Instargram Ocean Drive Living

For more from Sarah Bacchus visit www.slbstyle.com and follow her on Twitter @sarahbacchus 

Frost City Guides {Zurich}

Zurich is known as a sterile banking city – don’t believe a word of it. True, Zurich plays home to one of the largest stock exchanges in the world and is the financial motor of Switzerland itself, but step back from the markets and share prices and you’ll find an arty and surprisingly vibrant city. It is very expensive however. Especially food and drink.

Zurich’s setting on the northern tip of Lake Zurich helps lend it an air of affluence and good living, while the Fraumünster and Grossmünster churches, which face each other across the River Limmat, hint at the rich heritage of the Old Town. In addition, Zurich offers smart shops, upmarket clubs and good restaurants. I was told by a local that there were two sides. The golden side and the sneezy side. The Old Town is on the golden side – where the affluent people live. The weather is usually good on this side. The sneezy side is so called because it rarely gets any sun. This is where the ‘poor’ people live. Although, one feels, to be poor in Zurich is to well-off anywhere else!

We got a tram into the the old town. (8 Ch, all day on all types of transport) and walked around. Zurich’s Old Town. It is a beautiful and cobbled. Full of cafes and restaurants. Perfect for people watching.
The next day we made a picnic and went swimming in Lake Zurich. Picturesque, although I found the current very strong. Yes, I know it’s a lake!

While browsing in the elegant boutiques along Zurich’s Bahnhofstrasse, one of the most beautiful shopping areas in Europe you can work out your credit card. Jimmy Choo , Louis Vuttion are just some of the designer stores there. And this being a financial city with negotiable tax, you can be certain that a couple of metres below, unimaginable treasures are lying in underground vaults.

There are over 50 museums and over 100 art galleries. The National Museum is worth the price of admission alone for a table-top mock-up of the Battle of Morat in 1476 using 6000 tin soldiers.

All in all, Zurich is a beautiful city. It is very small. It would be very easy to cover all of it in less than a week. I made a friend chuckle by saying it reminded me of Glasgow; Small, cultural, near water.

Transport is easy to figure out. Get a tram/ train map. It is usually very prompt, but there was one day I waited for hours because of a tram crash. The locals don’t all speak English, but they were quite helpful. Other helpful hints are; Switzerland’s currency is still the Franc. And spend coins in Switzerland. Banks won’t change them.

I recommend Zurich. It is a lovely city to spend a weekend.

Main information:
Zürich Tourismus
Zurich Main Railway Station, 8021 Zurich
Tel: (044) 215 4000.
www.zuerich.com
Opening hours: Mon-Sat 0800-2030, Sun 0830-1830 (May-Oct); Mon-Sat 0830-1900, Sun 0900-1800 (Nov-Apr)
information@zuerich.com

Hotel reservations
044 215 40 40
hotel@zuerich.com

Passes:
The ZürichCARD, available for 24 or 72 hours,offers unlimited travel within the Zurich canton, free admission to over 40 museums, reduced admission to the zoo and a complimentary welcome drink at over 20 restaurants. You can buy the cards at the train stations, many hotels and some of the main VBZ ticket offices around town. There is a full downloadable guide to the ZürichCARD at

Transport times: Regular services from 5am until 00:30am
Friday and Saturday 1am until 4am.

Facts and figures:
Inhabitants city 383,565
Inhabitants canton 1.30m
Proportion of foreigners 31%
Currency Swiss Francs (CHF)
Colloquial language German ( Swiss German)
Other languages English, Italian, French

By Catherine Balavage