The Travellers Rest Stanley Staffordshire Pub

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  • A Roast Dinner Served Every Day of the Week
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Sunday Roast

Served every day of the week, everyone loves a roast dinner.

We know everyone loves a Roast Dinner, so much so that we serve a lovely roast dinner every day at The Travellers Rest.

Our chef will choose the most succulent joint of locally sourced meat to roast that day and you’ll find details of today’s moist and tender roast on our Specials Board.

travellers rest stanley opening times

Joint of Best British Beef

A sublime joint of best British Beef and a moist and tender Chicken Roast Dinner are firm favourites alternated with seasonal delights such as Spring Lamb and Slow Roast Pork Shoulder.

Served with Yorkshire Puddings, Roast and Boiled Potatoes, Seasonal Greens and lashings of real meat Gravy. Not Just for Sundays! – A lovely Roast Dinner served every weekday.

Enjoy a Roast Dinner at The Travellers Rest

12.00pm – 2.00pm every weekday lunch

5.00pm – 8.30pm every weekday evening

12.00pm to 7.30pm every Sunday

12.00pm to 8.30pm every Saturday

A weekend without a Roast – Unthinkable!

travellers rest stanley opening times

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You are here, travellers rest, staffordshire moorlands, staffordshire.

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The Traveller’s Rest is situated in the charming village of Stanley which enjoys an elevated position overlooking the gloriously rural Staffordshire Moorlands. Less than 2 miles from The Ashes Wedding Venue in Endon and just 8 miles from the Historic Market Town of Leek. Stanley is a delightfully picturesque English country village with an abundance of listed character properties featuring picture-perfect gardens, reminiscent of a time gone by.

Visit The Traveller’s Rest on a warm, sunny day and soak up the village atmosphere from our outdoor patio area with a chilled glass of white wine or draft Peroni in-hand.

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2018 Primetime Emmy & James Beard Award Winner

In Transit: Notes from the Underground

Jun 06 2018.

Spend some time in one of Moscow’s finest museums.

Subterranean commuting might not be anyone’s idea of a good time, but even in a city packing the war-games treasures and priceless bejeweled eggs of the Kremlin Armoury and the colossal Soviet pavilions of the VDNKh , the Metro holds up as one of Moscow’s finest museums. Just avoid rush hour.

The Metro is stunning and provides an unrivaled insight into the city’s psyche, past and present, but it also happens to be the best way to get around. Moscow has Uber, and the Russian version called Yandex Taxi , but also some nasty traffic. Metro trains come around every 90 seconds or so, at a more than 99 percent on-time rate. It’s also reasonably priced, with a single ride at 55 cents (and cheaper in bulk). From history to tickets to rules — official and not — here’s what you need to know to get started.

A Brief Introduction Buying Tickets Know Before You Go (Down) Rules An Easy Tour

A Brief Introduction

Moscow’s Metro was a long time coming. Plans for rapid transit to relieve the city’s beleaguered tram system date back to the Imperial era, but a couple of wars and a revolution held up its development. Stalin revived it as part of his grand plan to modernize the Soviet Union in the 1920s and 30s. The first lines and tunnels were constructed with help from engineers from the London Underground, although Stalin’s secret police decided that they had learned too much about Moscow’s layout and had them arrested on espionage charges and deported.

The beauty of its stations (if not its trains) is well-documented, and certainly no accident. In its illustrious first phases and particularly after the Second World War, the greatest architects of Soviet era were recruited to create gleaming temples celebrating the Revolution, the USSR, and the war triumph. No two stations are exactly alike, and each of the classic showpieces has a theme. There are world-famous shrines to Futurist architecture, a celebration of electricity, tributes to individuals and regions of the former Soviet Union. Each marble slab, mosaic tile, or light fixture was placed with intent, all in service to a station’s aesthetic; each element, f rom the smallest brass ear of corn to a large blood-spattered sword on a World War II mural, is an essential part of the whole.

travellers rest stanley opening times

The Metro is a monument to the Soviet propaganda project it was intended to be when it opened in 1935 with the slogan “Building a Palace for the People”. It brought the grand interiors of Imperial Russia to ordinary Muscovites, celebrated the Soviet Union’s past achievements while promising its citizens a bright Soviet future, and of course, it was a show-piece for the world to witness the might and sophistication of life in the Soviet Union.

It may be a museum, but it’s no relic. U p to nine million people use it daily, more than the London Underground and New York Subway combined. (Along with, at one time, about 20 stray dogs that learned to commute on the Metro.)

In its 80+ year history, the Metro has expanded in phases and fits and starts, in step with the fortunes of Moscow and Russia. Now, partly in preparation for the World Cup 2018, it’s also modernizing. New trains allow passengers to walk the entire length of the train without having to change carriages. The system is becoming more visitor-friendly. (There are helpful stickers on the floor marking out the best selfie spots .) But there’s a price to modernity: it’s phasing out one of its beloved institutions, the escalator attendants. Often they are middle-aged or elderly women—“ escalator grandmas ” in news accounts—who have held the post for decades, sitting in their tiny kiosks, scolding commuters for bad escalator etiquette or even bad posture, or telling jokes . They are slated to be replaced, when at all, by members of the escalator maintenance staff.

For all its achievements, the Metro lags behind Moscow’s above-ground growth, as Russia’s capital sprawls ever outwards, generating some of the world’s worst traffic jams . But since 2011, the Metro has been in the middle of an ambitious and long-overdue enlargement; 60 new stations are opening by 2020. If all goes to plan, the 2011-2020 period will have brought 125 miles of new tracks and over 100 new stations — a 40 percent increase — the fastest and largest expansion phase in any period in the Metro’s history.

Facts: 14 lines Opening hours: 5 a.m-1 a.m. Rush hour(s): 8-10 a.m, 4-8 p.m. Single ride: 55₽ (about 85 cents) Wi-Fi network-wide

travellers rest stanley opening times

Buying Tickets

  • Ticket machines have a button to switch to English.
  • You can buy specific numbers of rides: 1, 2, 5, 11, 20, or 60. Hold up fingers to show how many rides you want to buy.
  • There is also a 90-minute ticket , which gets you 1 trip on the metro plus an unlimited number of transfers on other transport (bus, tram, etc) within 90 minutes.
  • Or, you can buy day tickets with unlimited rides: one day (218₽/ US$4), three days (415₽/US$7) or seven days (830₽/US$15). Check the rates here to stay up-to-date.
  • If you’re going to be using the Metro regularly over a few days, it’s worth getting a Troika card , a contactless, refillable card you can use on all public transport. Using the Metro is cheaper with one of these: a single ride is 36₽, not 55₽. Buy them and refill them in the Metro stations, and they’re valid for 5 years, so you can keep it for next time. Or, if you have a lot of cash left on it when you leave, you can get it refunded at the Metro Service Centers at Ulitsa 1905 Goda, 25 or at Staraya Basmannaya 20, Building 1.
  • You can also buy silicone bracelets and keychains with built-in transport chips that you can use as a Troika card. (A Moscow Metro Fitbit!) So far, you can only get these at the Pushkinskaya metro station Live Helpdesk and souvenir shops in the Mayakovskaya and Trubnaya metro stations. The fare is the same as for the Troika card.
  • You can also use Apple Pay and Samsung Pay.

Rules, spoken and unspoken

No smoking, no drinking, no filming, no littering. Photography is allowed, although it used to be banned.

Stand to the right on the escalator. Break this rule and you risk the wrath of the legendary escalator attendants. (No shenanigans on the escalators in general.)

Get out of the way. Find an empty corner to hide in when you get off a train and need to stare at your phone. Watch out getting out of the train in general; when your train doors open, people tend to appear from nowhere or from behind ornate marble columns, walking full-speed.

Always offer your seat to elderly ladies (what are you, a monster?).

An Easy Tour

This is no Metro Marathon ( 199 stations in 20 hours ). It’s an easy tour, taking in most—though not all—of the notable stations, the bulk of it going clockwise along the Circle line, with a couple of short detours. These stations are within minutes of one another, and the whole tour should take about 1-2 hours.

Start at Mayakovskaya Metro station , at the corner of Tverskaya and Garden Ring,  Triumfalnaya Square, Moskva, Russia, 125047.

1. Mayakovskaya.  Named for Russian Futurist Movement poet Vladimir Mayakovsky and an attempt to bring to life the future he imagined in his poems. (The Futurist Movement, natch, was all about a rejecting the past and celebrating all things speed, industry, modern machines, youth, modernity.) The result: an Art Deco masterpiece that won the National Grand Prix for architecture at the New York World’s Fair in 1939. It’s all smooth, rounded shine and light, and gentle arches supported by columns of dark pink marble and stainless aircraft steel. Each of its 34 ceiling niches has a mosaic. During World War II, the station was used as an air-raid shelter and, at one point, a bunker for Stalin. He gave a subdued but rousing speech here in Nov. 6, 1941 as the Nazis bombed the city above.

travellers rest stanley opening times

Take the 3/Green line one station to:

2. Belorusskaya. Opened in 1952, named after the connected Belarussky Rail Terminal, which runs trains between Moscow and Belarus. This is a light marble affair with a white, cake-like ceiling, lined with Belorussian patterns and 12 Florentine ceiling mosaics depicting life in Belarussia when it was built.

travellers rest stanley opening times

Transfer onto the 1/Brown line. Then, one stop (clockwise) t o:

3. Novoslobodskaya.  This station was designed around the stained-glass panels, which were made in Latvia, because Alexey Dushkin, the Soviet starchitect who dreamed it up (and also designed Mayakovskaya station) couldn’t find the glass and craft locally. The stained glass is the same used for Riga’s Cathedral, and the panels feature plants, flowers, members of the Soviet intelligentsia (musician, artist, architect) and geometric shapes.

travellers rest stanley opening times

Go two stops east on the 1/Circle line to:

4. Komsomolskaya. Named after the Komsomol, or the Young Communist League, this might just be peak Stalin Metro style. Underneath the hub for three regional railways, it was intended to be a grand gateway to Moscow and is today its busiest station. It has chandeliers; a yellow ceiling with Baroque embellishments; and in the main hall, a colossal red star overlaid on golden, shimmering tiles. Designer Alexey Shchusev designed it as an homage to the speech Stalin gave at Red Square on Nov. 7, 1941, in which he invoked Russia’s illustrious military leaders as a pep talk to Soviet soldiers through the first catastrophic year of the war.   The station’s eight large mosaics are of the leaders referenced in the speech, such as Alexander Nevsky, a 13th-century prince and military commander who bested German and Swedish invading armies.

travellers rest stanley opening times

One more stop clockwise to Kurskaya station,  and change onto the 3/Blue  line, and go one stop to:

5. Baumanskaya.   Opened in 1944. Named for the Bolshevik Revolutionary Nikolai Bauman , whose monument and namesake district are aboveground here. Though he seemed like a nasty piece of work (he apparently once publicly mocked a woman he had impregnated, who later hung herself), he became a Revolutionary martyr when he was killed in 1905 in a skirmish with a monarchist, who hit him on the head with part of a steel pipe. The station is in Art Deco style with atmospherically dim lighting, and a series of bronze sculptures of soldiers and homefront heroes during the War. At one end, there is a large mosaic portrait of Lenin.

travellers rest stanley opening times

Stay on that train direction one more east to:

6. Elektrozavodskaya. As you may have guessed from the name, this station is the Metro’s tribute to all thing electrical, built in 1944 and named after a nearby lightbulb factory. It has marble bas-relief sculptures of important figures in electrical engineering, and others illustrating the Soviet Union’s war-time struggles at home. The ceiling’s recurring rows of circular lamps give the station’s main tunnel a comforting glow, and a pleasing visual effect.

travellers rest stanley opening times

Double back two stops to Kurskaya station , and change back to the 1/Circle line. Sit tight for six stations to:

7. Kiyevskaya. This was the last station on the Circle line to be built, in 1954, completed under Nikita Khrushchev’ s guidance, as a tribute to his homeland, Ukraine. Its three large station halls feature images celebrating Ukraine’s contributions to the Soviet Union and Russo-Ukrainian unity, depicting musicians, textile-working, soldiers, farmers. (One hall has frescoes, one mosaics, and the third murals.) Shortly after it was completed, Khrushchev condemned the architectural excesses and unnecessary luxury of the Stalin era, which ushered in an epoch of more austere Metro stations. According to the legend at least, he timed the policy in part to ensure no Metro station built after could outshine Kiyevskaya.

travellers rest stanley opening times

Change to the 3/Blue line and go one stop west.

8. Park Pobedy. This is the deepest station on the Metro, with one of the world’s longest escalators, at 413 feet. If you stand still, the escalator ride to the surface takes about three minutes .) Opened in 2003 at Victory Park, the station celebrates two of Russia’s great military victories. Each end has a mural by Georgian artist Zurab Tsereteli, who also designed the “ Good Defeats Evil ” statue at the UN headquarters in New York. One mural depicts the Russian generals’ victory over the French in 1812 and the other, the German surrender of 1945. The latter is particularly striking; equal parts dramatic, triumphant, and gruesome. To the side, Red Army soldiers trample Nazi flags, and if you look closely there’s some blood spatter among the detail. Still, the biggest impressions here are the marble shine of the chessboard floor pattern and the pleasingly geometric effect if you view from one end to the other.

travellers rest stanley opening times

Keep going one more stop west to:

9. Slavyansky Bulvar.  One of the Metro’s youngest stations, it opened in 2008. With far higher ceilings than many other stations—which tend to have covered central tunnels on the platforms—it has an “open-air” feel (or as close to it as you can get, one hundred feet under). It’s an homage to French architect Hector Guimard, he of the Art Nouveau entrances for the Paris M é tro, and that’s precisely what this looks like: A Moscow homage to the Paris M é tro, with an additional forest theme. A Cyrillic twist on Guimard’s Metro-style lettering over the benches, furnished with t rees and branch motifs, including creeping vines as towering lamp-posts.

travellers rest stanley opening times

Stay on the 3/Blue line and double back four stations to:

10. Arbatskaya. Its first iteration, Arbatskaya-Smolenskaya station, was damaged by German bombs in 1941. It was rebuilt in 1953, and designed to double as a bomb shelter in the event of nuclear war, although unusually for stations built in the post-war phase, this one doesn’t have a war theme. It may also be one of the system’s most elegant: Baroque, but toned down a little, with red marble floors and white ceilings with gilded bronze c handeliers.

travellers rest stanley opening times

Jump back on the 3/Blue line  in the same direction and take it one more stop:

11. Ploshchad Revolyutsii (Revolution Square). Opened in 1938, and serving Red Square and the Kremlin . Its renowned central hall has marble columns flanked by 76 bronze statues of Soviet heroes: soldiers, students, farmers, athletes, writers, parents. Some of these statues’ appendages have a yellow sheen from decades of Moscow’s commuters rubbing them for good luck. Among the most popular for a superstitious walk-by rub: the snout of a frontier guard’s dog, a soldier’s gun (where the touch of millions of human hands have tapered the gun barrel into a fine, pointy blade), a baby’s foot, and a woman’s knee. (A brass rooster also sports the telltale gold sheen, though I am told that rubbing the rooster is thought to bring bad luck. )

Now take the escalator up, and get some fresh air.

travellers rest stanley opening times

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21 Things to Know Before You Go to Moscow

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Opening times in Moscow

  • General Information
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Opening times in Moscow

Learn when shops, museums and other tourist attractions open and close in Moscow , so you can plan to make the most of your trip!

Stores and shopping centres in Moscow city centre are usually open from  10 am to 10 pm  throughout the week.

Tourist attractions

The majority of Moscow's places of interest open at 10 am and close around 5 pm, although during the summer these opening times may be extended later. Our guides to each attraction include their opening times so you can plan ahead.

Moscow's museums   also usually open at 10 am, closing at 6 pm. They are often closed on one day of the week, and some have longer opening times on certain days. Check out each individual museum guide to find the exact times for the places you want to visit.

Restaurants

In Russia, there is no strict fixed time for meals. You'll find many restaurants in Moscow are open between midday and 4 pm for lunch, and between 6 pm and 11 pm for dinner, although there are 24 hour places to be found too!

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travellers rest stanley opening times

travellers rest stanley opening times

Metro in Moscow: Getting Around the Capital

Shortly about russian metro.

  • The easiest, and also the fastest way to get around Moscow! Many lines connect all areas of the capital and the suburbs.
  • Opening hours: from 5:30 a.m. to 1:00 a.m.
  • The cost of one trip to the Moscow metro is 57 rubles (9$).
  • The ticket is valid at all stations in any direction (no zones!)
  • Tickets can be purchased at the subway and self-service machines.
  • You can use your credit card or mobile phone to pay on turnstile or in the special ticketing office at every station
  • Free Wi-Fi is available

travellers rest stanley opening times

Best Restaurants in Moscow, Russia

Restaurants in moscow, establishment type, online options, traveller rating, dietary restrictions, restaurant features, neighbourhood.

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  • Lyubov Pirogova
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  1. Contact The Travellers Rest Stanley

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  2. Welcome to The Travellers Rest Stanley Staffordshire

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  3. Welcome to The Travellers Rest Stanley Staffordshire

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  5. Welcome to The Travellers Rest Stanley Staffordshire

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  6. Welcome to The Travellers Rest Stanley Staffordshire

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COMMENTS

  1. Welcome to The Travellers Rest Stanley Staffordshire

    Bar Opening Hours. 12.00 - 9.30pm Sunday 12.00 - 10.30pm Monday 12.00 - 9.30pm Tuesday 12.00 - 10.30pm Wednesday 12.00 - 10.30pm Thursday 12.00 - 11.00pm Friday & Saturday. Bank Holidays. ... The Travellers Rest. Tompkin Road Stanley Village Stanley ST9 9LX. Telephone. 01782 502580.

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    Bar Opening Hours. 12.00 - 9.30pm Sunday 12.00 - 10.30pm Monday 12.00 - 9.30pm Tuesday 12.00 - 10.30pm Wednesday 12.00 - 10.30pm Thursday 12.00 - 11.00pm Friday & Saturday. Bank Holidays. ... The Travellers Rest. Tompkin Road Stanley Village Stanley ST9 9LX. Telephone. 01782 502580.

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  6. Sunday Roast

    Enjoy a Roast Dinner at The Travellers Rest. 12.00pm - 2.00pm every weekday lunch. 5.00pm - 8.30pm every weekday evening. 12.00pm to 7.30pm every Sunday. 12.00pm to 8.30pm every Saturday.

  7. TRAVELLERS REST, STAFFORDSHIRE MOORLANDS, Staffordshire

    About TRAVELLERS REST: The Traveller's Rest is situated in the charming village of Stanley which enjoys an elevated position overlooking the gloriously rural Staffordshire Moorlands. Less than 2 miles from The Ashes Wedding Venue in Endon and just 8 miles from the Historic Market Town of Leek.

  8. The Travellers Rest Stanley Stoke-on-Trent

    Travellers Rest, Stanley Village, Stoke-on-Trent, United Kingdom, ST9 9LX. The Travellers Rest Stanley Website. Website Facebook. The Travellers Rest Stanley Phone. 0178250 2580. The Travellers Rest Stanley Opening Hours. Monday - Sunday : 11:45 - 22:30. Thursday - Saturday : 11:45 - 23:00.

  9. The Travellers Rest Restaurant

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  11. THE TRAVELLERS REST, Stoke-on-Trent

    The Travellers Rest, Stoke-on-Trent: See 475 unbiased reviews of The Travellers Rest, rated 4 of 5 on Tripadvisor and ranked #37 of 502 restaurants in Stoke-on-Trent. ... We would like to point out that we adhere to government guidelines at all times and have always used an efficient Track & Trace system. We have both Eve Pass and the NHS ...

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  14. Travellers Rest in Stanley

    Travellers Rest. Follow 3. Stanley, Stoke-on-Trent, ST9; About; Reviews 842; What's on; News & jobs; Contact us; ... Been here numerous times, never had a bad meal. Great service, great beers on offer and others drinks also. Would always recommend ... Stanley Village Stanley, Stoke-on-Trent Staffordshire ST9 9LX . 01782 502580

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    Find ⏰ opening times for The Travellers in 12 LAKE LOCK ROAD, Stanley, West Yorkshire, WF3 4HZ and check other details as well, such as: ☎️ phone number, map, ... The Travellers opening times. Opens in 5 h 44 min. Updated on 06/12/2023 . Opening Hours. Hours may differ - changed a while ago. Tuesday. 12:00 - 23:00. Wednesday. 12:00 - 23:00.

  16. How to get around Moscow using the underground metro

    But since 2011, the Metro has been in the middle of an ambitious and long-overdue enlargement; 60 new stations are opening by 2020. If all goes to plan, the 2011-2020 period will have brought 125 miles of new tracks and over 100 new stations — a 40 percent increase — the fastest and largest expansion phase in any period in the Metro's ...

  17. Opening times in Moscow

    Shops. Stores and shopping centres in Moscow city centre are usually open from 10 am to 10 pm throughout the week.. Tourist attractions. The majority of Moscow's places of interest open at 10 am and close around 5 pm, although during the summer these opening times may be extended later. Our guides to each attraction include their opening times so you can plan ahead.

  18. Moscow metro: maps, tickets, travell advice

    The easiest, and also the fastest way to get around Moscow! Many lines connect all areas of the capital and the suburbs. Opening hours: from 5:30 a.m. to 1:00 a.m. The cost of one trip to the Moscow metro is 57 rubles (9$). The ticket is valid at all stations in any direction (no zones!)

  19. Best Restaurants in Moscow, Russia

    Best Dining in Moscow, Central Russia: See 385,426 Tripadvisor traveller reviews of 15,514 Moscow restaurants and search by cuisine, price, location, and more.