A restaurant offering diners spectacular views of the capital is set to open to the public for the first time.
Currently a members-only club, Paramount is located on the 32nd floor of the Centre Point tower in central London and may be familiar to those who have used Kensington hotels.

Due to the consistently high demand for tables from non-members, the restaurant will relax its policy and accept bookings from all diners next month, the Evening Standard reports.
“Ever since we opened in 2008 we have had numerous people asking us to dine,” Paramount’s founder and owner Pierre Condou told the newspaper.
“It just seemed churlish of us when we were getting 100 calls a day to refuse them all, so the decision was made to open up.”
Paramount will be the highest public eatery in the city when it opens on May 14th, although it could lose that title when the BT Tower’s revolving restaurant re-launches next year.
Situated at the foot of Oxford Street, Centre Point is 385 metres high and was one of London’s first skyscrapers.
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