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PRIVACY
Enterprise

New Tyneside hospitality group launched by The Patricia restaurateur and tech entrepreneur

The first new opening for the GRDY Restaurant Group is Ophelia in Gosforth - and more will follow

Nick Grieves, chef and co-owner of Ophelia(Image: GRDY Restaurant Group)

A Tyneside tech entrepreneur and a leading chef have joined forces to create a new restaurant group, with plans to open a raft of regional venues.

Chef Nick Grieves is days away from opening Ophelia in Gosforth, a new sister venue to his popular Jesmond venue The Patricia, which has already garnered rave reviews from peers including the likes of Simon King and Terry Laybourne, following a week of launch events. And the French-style neighbourhood bistro – based in the former M Steel Cycles shop – is set to be the first of several new foodie destinations Mr Grieves will launch, alongside business partner Dan Smyth.

While Ophelia is just opening, the pair created new company GRDY Restaurant Group in October 2021, a number of years after Mr Smyth, a frequent diner at The Patricia, told of his ambitions to invest in hospitality, having spent his entire career working in the tech industry. Mr Smyth founded gaming studio Bede Gaming in 2012, growing it from a one-man operation to a multimillion-pound turnover business and major employer in Gosforth.

Read more: Wine and gift company Lanchester Group hails record revenues

He exited the company following a significant takeover deal in 2020. Mr Grieves, meanwhile, first opened The Patricia in December 2016, launching his own business after spending time in Michelin-starred restaurants in London. He had originally started out in construction, but quit to teach himself how to cook.

The restaurant has had praise heaped on it by leading food critics, such as Marina O’Loughlin who described it as “a little belter” in a Guardian write-up. Having successfully navigated the pandemic – keeping regulars satisfyingly fed with its The Patricia at Home enterprise in lockdown – Mr Grieves said the time was right to open the new group’s new restaurant.

Mr Smyth bought the old cycle shop around 18 months ago, and after a lengthy wait to secure ‘change of use’ permissions and a drinks licence, more than £500,000 has been invested the building. Ophelia, which has 34 restaurant covers and nine at its bar, officially opens on Bowsden Terrace, Gosforth, this week. More than 200 people have already booked in for its first sittings.

Their plans include the opening of a neighbouring top notch ‘greasy spoon’ called Cafeteria, a 35-cover which is due to open in March, serving up breakfasts prepared by the Ophelia team. From there, they have a number of other buildings in on their radar for other foodie enterprises, which could bring on board other emerging businesses.