www.fgks.org   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

Feline fresh: Introducing Britain's first cat café - Lady Dinah’s Cat Emporium - and the eleven kitties who live there

As the cafe opens this weekend, Sophie Robehmed meets the cats, the owners, and the crowdfunders who made it happen

It’s past 9pm and a group has congregated outside a shop window, wedged between an off-licence and an Indian-cum-Indo-Chinese restaurant on Bethnal Green Road in east London. Every now and then, a wide-eyed woman nudges the spectacled guy next to her and gives a little jump of excitement as she coos at a spotted kitten preening itself on a faux grass pedestal.

Welcome to the world of Lady Dinah’s Cat Emporium, London’s first cat café, which finally opens its doors to the public on 1 March after more than a year of preparations. The claws are out as cat-loving ladies and gents of all ages are pouncing on the opportunity to sit, eat, drink and play with the 11 resident felines (Adamska, Artemis, Biscuit, Carbonelle, Donnie, Indiana, Loki, Mue, Petra, Romeo and Wookie). 3,000 bookings were made in the first four-and-a-half hours after the café announced its opening day, causing the its website to crash, demonstrating just how many people wish to do as the Japanese do; Japan being, of course, where the cat cafe trend really kicked off after its first feline joint opened in Osaka 10 years ago.

When 31-year-old Aussie and self-confessed crazy cat lady Lauren Pears launched her crowdfunding campaign to introduce the cat café concept to the start-up streets of Shoreditch on Christmas Eve 2012, she never expected to exceed her £108,000 target in less than two months. The generosity was incredible – and none more so than that of Anna Kogan, a 30-year-old Moscow animal welfare organisation founder and London trader who has since become co-owner of the emporium, after investing enough money for Lauren to obtain a visa to stay in the country, something that costs £200,000.

“Lauren needed double the amount she had raised to cover so it was something I wanted to do,” says Anna. “I love animals, I’m a vegetarian and have two rescue cats called Bonnie and Clyde.”

Rehoming cats is something that’s close to Anna and Lauren’s hearts – all 11 cats were donated by people leaving the country that could no longer look after them – as is the welfare of the moggies themselves. The owners are keen to mention that they cannot re-home any more feline friends because “it’s not good for the cats,” says Laura, if the café becomes too crowded.

The duo, who faced a series of delays – from waiting for builders to be granted permission, to resistance from those from above – also have the International Cat Care charity and cat behaviourists on board, while three of their eight employees have a basic cat care qualification to ensure the kitties stay happy.

“If the cats are sick of being around people, they can rest in the residing area [an elaborate book shelf], go behind it or hide out in the holes,” adds Anna. “The cats have a break for about an hour each afternoon when people won’t be allowed to visit too.”

The emporium’s page on the Indiegogo website indicates that there were 1,681 funders, donating everything from £5 to £20,000. Gemma Davies, 32, paid £500 to sponsor Artemis, a name that she got to choose herself. So what motivated her to get on board? “It sounds really sad but I’d really love to own cats. I had them growing up, but I can’t have them now as my boyfriend is allergic to them.”

Not all fundraisers are frustrated non-cat owners like Gemma, however. Gina Clarke, 48, has two cats of her own but bagged an ‘Emporium Earlybird’ offer for £120, allowing her to be one of the first people through the doors. “I just love cats and I’m intrigued by the concept. I work nearby so I thought that when I get stressed, I can come here to relax and then return to my desk.”

Another fundraiser shouts out, “My cat died!”, while a Ph.D. student admits that she’s battling with depression and hopes her VIP membership to the café will “save” her. None of this is lost on Lauren, who has sacrificed her salary and her free time, often working 14-hour days and weekends to turn her vision into a reality.

“I just want to make it a happy place to go,” she says. “When people leave the café feeling cheerful, it feels like the business is making a difference.”

VIDEO
Have you tried new the Independent Digital Edition iPad app?
Arts & Entertainment
Naomi Watts stars as Princess Diana which came out on top at this year's Barfta Awards
arts + ents Awards recognise the clangers to have disgraced the screen this year
News
PARK CITY, UT - JANUARY 19: Philip Seymour Hoffman poses for a portrait during the 2014 Sundance Film Festival at the Getty Images Portrait Studio at the Village At The Lift on January 19, 2014 in Park City, Utah.
news
Arts & Entertainment
tv Will Dean reveals his top 10 BBC detectives
News
Torode says of his home country: 'I didn't really play football or drink beer. I cooked, which was pretty un-Australian. And I didn't really like Australian music...'
news Presenter doesn’t like beer or Aussie Rules football
Arts & Entertainment
Paul Walker tops list of the most searched for People of 2013
film Paul Walker was killed in November
Independent
Travel Shop
the manor
Old Swan & Minster Mill, Oxfordshire
from £139prpn Find out more
santorini
Boutique Kefalonia holiday
from £549pp Find out more
sardina foodie
Rocco Forte Hotel Amigo
from £146prpn Find out more
Have you tried new the Independent Digital Edition iPad app?
Independent Dating
and  

By clicking 'Search' you
are agreeing to our
Terms of Use.

iJobs Job Widget
iJobs General

Product Manager - Automotive, Southampton

£50K to 60K Plus car and good benefits: Charter Selection: Major highly profit...

Technical Support Analyst Apprentice

£169.88 per week: QA Apprenticeships: This company was established in 2000, an...

BSF Apprentice

£230.62 per week: QA Apprenticeships: This is your opportunity to join the UK’...

Client Services Executive IT Apprentice

£150.00 per week: QA Apprenticeships: This company was founded on a belief tha...

Day In a Page

Ticket to slide: How Team GB's skeleton women conquered the slopes at the Winter Olympics

Ticket to slide: How Team GB's skeleton

Tom Peck reveals how the team conquered the slopes at the Winter Olympics
Sex in men's prisons: 'The US system cultivates rape. If you treat people like animals, they behave like it'

Sex in men's prisons: 'The US system cultivates rape'

Shaun Attwood's book, Prison Time, details the sex – consensual or otherwise – the prostitution, the pimping and the equal, loving relationships behind bars

Wes Anderson and Hollywood's best props

Meet the designer tasked with bringing the director's films to life
'I'm a rubbish Australian': MasterChef's John Torode goes back to his roots

John Torode: 'I'm a rubbish Australian'

Gerard Gilbert meets the chef and TV presenter to discuss his first big solo project, a new series for Good Food Channel called John Torode's Australia
The experts' guide to the perfect pancake

The experts' guide to the perfect pancake

Shrove Tuesday is nearly upon us. Get tossing with Mark Hix's classic batter, plus some of the planet's best pancake joints reveal their favourite toppings
Enemy within: The network of Britons who spied for Hitler during Second World War

Enemy within

The network of Britons who spied for Hitler during Second World War
Oscar Pistorius murder trial: what should we expect?

Oscar Pistorius trial: what should we expect?

The murder trial of the world's most famous disabled athlete begins in Pretoria next week
Non-Stop, film review: Liam Neeson's tough guy act is on target in this suspenseful drama

Neeson's tough guy act is on target in Non-Stop

Non-Stop is not a film that will appeal to the airline industry but, true to the title, it strikes a relentless narrative tempo
All the presidents' meals: A new memoir spills the beans on cooking at the White House

White House chef spills the beans

John Moeller cooked family meals for the Bushes and Clintons, and banquets for world leaders
Citizen clean: Campaigners frustrated with the Government's failure to cut the amount of air pollution are uniting to tackle 'invisible killer'

Citizen clean: Campaigners tackle air pollution

Campaigners frustrated with the Government’s failure to cut the amount of air pollution in our cities are uniting to tackle the ‘invisible killer’ themselves
Spritz promises to boost reading speeds to a breakneck 500 words a minute - will it enhance our enjoyment of literature?

Will Spritz enhance our enjoyment of literature?

The new app promises to boost reading speeds to a breakneck 500 words a minute
Wanderlust: 10 best Asia travel books

Wanderlust: 10 best Asia travel books

If you’re heading east or want to learn more about the continent, take a guided tour
Nicolas Anelka 'quenelle' gesture: Split second that changed everything

Split second that changed everything

Whatever he may have intended, English football now knows more than it would like about Dieudonné and his gesture
Dark shadow of Allen Stanford grips Antigua

Dark shadow of Allen Stanford grips Antigua

The ECB may have tried to quickly forget the 'Twenty20 for 20' but the fraudster's downfall cost thousands of jobs and left a giant hole in the island's economy
Stephen Roche: Ireland is ready for Giro d'Italia's grand start

Stephen Roche: Ireland is ready for Giro d'Italia's grand start

The cycling legend on how Belfast has geared up for May's big event