**Overall ranking: 40 (ranked 24 in 2010)
Restaurant ranking: 13 (ranked 8 in 2010)**
Nigel Platts-Martin - Snapshot
Nigel Platts-Martin is the restaurateur behind five of London's most popular restaurants: The Square, which he co-owns with chef Philip Howard and which holds two Michelin stars; The Ledbury, which he co-owns with Howard and chef-patron Brett Graham - also the holder of two stars; and the one-Michelin-starred restaurants Chez Bruce, the Glasshouse in Kew and La Trompette in Chiswick, all three of which he co-owns with chef Bruce Poole.
Nigel Platts-Martin - Career guide
After buying what was a failing brasserie on Wandsworth Common called Harveyâs in 1986, with no clear vision of what to do with it, he invited White to take over as head chef. The restaurant opened in January 1987 to rave reviews, winning a Michelin star 12 months later and a second three years after that.
In 1991, he opened a second restaurant, the Square in St Jamesâs, alongside Philip Howard, a former chef de partie at Harveyâs, which gained its first star in 1994 and a second in 1998. When White parted ways with Harveyâs in 1993, Platts-Martin invited Bruce Poole, who had worked under Howard at the Square, to reinvigorate it, and the pair opened Chez Bruce, which holds one Michelin star and remains one of Londonâs most popular neighbourhood restaurants.
Platts-Martin and Poole went on to open the Glasshouse in Kew in 1999 with former Chez Bruce chef Anthony Boyd behind the stove and La Trompette in Chiswick in 2001, both of which have a Michelin star. In 2005, he opened the Ledbury in Notting Hill with Howard and former Square chef Brett Graham. It won its first Michelin star in 2006 and its second in 2010.
Nigel Platts-Martin - What we think
Some diners might not even know his name, but the media-shy Platts-Martin has â" over the past 23 years â" opened some of the capitalâs most successful restaurants. His business acumen, policy of promoting from within and empowering his chefs and his refusal to overstretch his empire has nurtured stability and growth in his restaurants. At the height of the pre-recession era, in 2006, they were serving 190,000 customers a year and achieving annual sales of £13.2m.
It wasnât all plain sailing. At first Harveyâs and the Square struggled to make money, due to the ownersâ collective lack of experience. Platts-Martin, however, was willing to roll up his sleeves and learn, even working the reception desk at the Square for a year to establish where the restaurantâs business came from.
While some restaurant empires fade over time, Platts-Martinâs continues to be as popular with customers as with critics. His five sites currently hold seven Michelin stars (Michelin Star restaurants in London) between them, and regularly feature in the top 10 in diner-voted guides such as Hardenâs London Restaurants.
The restaurants have proved so financially successful that Platts-Martin has funded the opening of new venues through cash-flow, not bank borrowings.
Howard sums him up: âNigel is a relentless perfectionist who is able to maintain a clear vision of what we are trying to achieve and how and with whom we should achieve it.â
Platts-Martinâs achievements won him an award for Outstanding Contribution to the Industry in the Carlton Restaurant Awards 2000, followed by the Independent Restaurateur of the Year Catey in 2004. In 2009, he received an MBE.
Nigel Platts-Martinâs ranking in the 2010 Caterersearch.com 100 >>
Hospitality figures in New Year Honours list >>