Shot in the dark (China Daily) Updated: 2006-05-14 13:51
Pool halls are scattered all over Beijing. Tucked away down salubrious
alleyways, the doors are unmarked and players merge into a 60-cigarette haze.
Ball House is in a tiny hutong to the east of the Drum and Bell towers in the
Houhai area, and a plain red door that causes new customers to pause and
question what lies behind. Inside, if your pool skills lack artistry, the
surroundings make up for it.
The high ceilings and balconies overlooking the three pool tables creating a
spacious, manor house feel. But there are still enough low-lit secluded sofas to
make the recreation of the "boy shows girl how to line up a shot" movie scene a
real possibility. The rough concrete walls host a few pieces of warm-coloured
art and a bottle of red wine adorns every table-1990 it may be but the grape is
not the finest.
Classy pool bars have sprung up in cities like London over the past few years
but Ball House is different. You rarely have to wait two hours for a
table-despite there being only three-and it has an exclusive feel to it without
pretension. One of the owners, a cheerful lady in her 40s and at first glance an
unlikely potting expert, makes sure of that.
Pool is fair enough at 50 yuan an hour but drinks are on the pricey side. A
Tsing Tao is at the low-end on 20 yuan but spirits and mixers touch the 40 yuan
mark.
Ball House Location: East of the Drum Tower, Zhonglouwan
Hutong (next to Hosanna Cafe), behind Gu Lou Xidajie Opening time:
2pm-late Tel: 010-64074051.
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