Faster Lane / Tyler Brûlé
Riding the rails
It’s Saturday afternoon and I’m sitting on the terrace in the sunshine, easing out of a fog caused by five hours of dance floor and champagne at a gathering of friends for my birthday. The original plan was for something intimate and contained but these things have a tendency to get out of hand on the numbers front and by 03.00 there was a tightly packed group jumping to Exile’s J-pop classic “Choo Choo Train”. Go have a peek online to sample the general vibe; there’s a bit of choreography that you might want to master for your next twirl on the tiles. In a moment I’ll get to the answer to last weekend’s “name the price for room-service capp and OJ in Miami” competition and announce the winners. Before that, let’s rewind the tape.
Monday, Milan. The rail journey between Zürich and Milano Centrale is one of my favourite day trips and is now full of rituals. There’s the 07.20 coffee at the Miró pop-up at Zürich Hauptbahnhof, the stride down the platform to the silent carriage for a rear-facing seat, a bit of settling in and then a walk down to the dining car for another coffee and maybe a bite of something light. Milan wasn’t yet in Christmas mode but the city wasn’t short of shoppers. After three quick meetings I swung up to Como for a little wardrobe top-up at A Gi Emme (one of Italy’s best multi-brand shops), crossed the border to Lugano for another meeting and was on the 18.30-ish back to Zürich, where I found a table in the dining car and enjoyed a hearty Swiss dish for dinner, accompanied by a glass of fendant. Perfection on rails.
Tuesday, Lisbon. The 06.10 Tap flight to Lisbon is not pretty. Andrew has already filled you in on most of the details of our amazing book launch. The two key bits that he left out were the speedy mini-book signing that we did at Under the Cover, one of our favourite independent book and magazine shops in Europe, and the most exquisite dinner at Cacué.
Wednesday, Lisbon and A Coruña. If there’s a stretch of Europe that’s in need of high-speed rail, it’s the Lisbon-Porto-Vigo-Santiago-A Coruña corridor. While a flight via Madrid was an option, I decided to get the very trusty Samuel, who is among Lisbon’s best chauffeurs, to drive the six hours up to Galicia. After an afternoon spent at the HQ of one of world’s biggest retailers (which could that be?) I visited the just-opened Steven Meisel exhibition on the harbour. Wow! If you have a passion for fashion photography and believe that the early 1990s were a golden era, you need to make your way to A Coruña and spend an hour or two at the exhibition, as well as the adjoining café and gift shop. I would also add a stop at Cordera for a bit of locally made knitwear and then dinner at Charrúa Coruña.
Thursday, A Coruña and Zürich via Madrid. For a region that boasts big retail, big shipbuilding and plenty of manufacturing, Galicia is not particularly well connected with few direct flights to the rest of Europe (forget about the world) and most traffic having to connect via Madrid. Given the region’s wealth, not to mention its fine food and wine, isn’t Galicia due its own exquisitely designed regional airline? I know just the person who would love to work on it.
Friday, Zürich. The final Christmas touches were being hung, strung and applied at our Zürich outpost and our just-launched outdoor felt capes were being put to good use by customers who wanted to keep the chill at bay. At 20.00 sharp the birthday celebration kicked off at the Charlatan, a newish supper club that features in the winter edition of Konfekt and brings back that perfect combo of dining and the possibility of a civilised night of dancing. Or not.
Saturday, Zürich. I’m happy to report that I’m now feeling much better than when I started writing this 60 minutes ago. So it’s time to announce the winners of the competition but, before that, an observation. Many readers have clearly not been out in the big wide world lately or never order room service as they have no concept of what things cost. The number of people who suggested that $15 (€14.40) would get a cappuccino and freshly squeezed orange juice to your Miami Beach hotel room was something of a surprise. To be clear, this experience was three weeks ago, not three decades. The bill I was presented with was $34.20 (€32.80) – delivery, tax and service charge included. That means we have a few winners out of more than 400 responses. Congratulations to Craig (Raleigh), Kathleen (Portland), Stuart (Gothenburg), Dragos (Basel), Michel-Pierre (London), Jorge (Toronto), Brian (Charleston), Caroline (London), Craig (Munich), Christie (Edinburgh), Richard (Les Houches) and Emil (Lima) for coming within a dollar of the amount on the tab. All winners will receive a copy of The Monocle Book of Photography and will be contacted by my office for shipping details. Looking forward to seeing many of you at our Zürich Christmas market next weekend!