The time table is expandable to cater for increased volume of commuters, he said. |
|
A team of professionals cook, clean and cater for guests during their stay. |
|
The established main companies plan to open new outlets to cater for the deluge of cash being wagered by city gamblers. |
|
Their coach comes across as weak, making decisions to cater for the fading hero rather than the good of the team. |
|
Play facilities specially constructed to cater for juniors and toddlers will be built next to Chiltern Primary School. |
|
The Orangery, situated within the grade two-listed coach house, can cater for up to 16 delegates. |
|
All of the museums offer stylish settings for events and can cater for up to 1500 guests. |
|
Instead the parking garage, which was originally going to be a flat, treed space for 120 cars, will now cater for 300 cars. |
|
The school now has two compost bins and a wormery in place to cater for the volume of waste. |
|
We are always amenable to trying out new songs or developing the programme to cater for more and more people. |
|
The hotel is licensed to perform civil ceremonies and the suites can cater for up to 80 people. |
|
Additional visits can be arranged by appointment and they also cater for birthday and school parties. |
|
It is one of 34 set up throughout the UK to cater for the business community's transport logistics needs. |
|
He was in luck and the hotel agreed to cater for 2,000 guests, who came from as far away as Pakistan. |
|
These classes will cater for all categories, from beginners to advanced students. |
|
The games facilities will cater for sports such as table tennis, volleyball, pool and badminton. |
|
Training will be tailor-made to cater for the individual woman's needs and can last from a matter of days to up to six months. |
|
This park will for the first time cater for teenagers as well as young children in the borough. |
|
Rather than expanding services to cater for its population explosion, the town has taken a major step backwards over the past thirty years. |
|
This will cater for events, such as wrestling and ice hockey, and will also contain an extensive science park. |
|
|
Some recreational activities were retained to cater for all age groups, such as golf and tenpin bowling. |
|
Equally, the decision to erect a marquee in the car park to cater for some corporate functions has been questioned by events organisers. |
|
It was proposed that the new multi-purpose building would provide a function room, banqueting hall, theatre and would cater for civil weddings. |
|
The place throbbed to the rhythm of pneumatic drills as dozens of new tourist complexes took shape to cater for local demand. |
|
Yet the big chains stayed open, forcing smaller competitors to do the same to cater for the small but consistent demand for foreign racing. |
|
They cater for men and boys from the age of two upwards and have trousers and jeans up to a 62 in waist. |
|
The extended conference room will be able to cater for up to 800 for sit-down meals and up to 2,000 delegates at conferences. |
|
Corrianders Restaurant are able to cater for individual sittings or larger groups. |
|
Some recreational activities were retained to cater for the needs of the ADF population across all age groups, such as golf and ten-pin bowling. |
|
Fox argues that a new village development plan is needed to cater for the upsurge in interest in living in the area. |
|
The top schools cater for a cohort of students whose parents can afford to pay for grinds and revision courses. |
|
The club also plans to extend the existing car park to cater for teams, club members and visitors. |
|
Yet even the rugged gorge walks and canyoning of the interior cater for the luxury traveller. |
|
It can find shoes for people up to size 18, and cater for people who require wide or narrow fittings. |
|
They could then make it clear that they are to cater for smokers only and make a packet by catering exclusively to that group. |
|
The shops stay open till all hours, the ostarias cater for families and, on sufferance, for tourists too. |
|
The new facility will cater for the rarer bird species, like parrots, raptors, waterfowl, cranes, storks, hornbills, and other selected birds. |
|
The tickets have been classified into nine categories to cater for different sets of target customers. |
|
And there's a few features to cater for the clientele expected to frequent the Wizard Inns bar. |
|
The centre will cater for young artists, who will be able to develop their skills in painting or performing arts. |
|
|
However, we continue to cater for large numbers of boys and girls and are fortunate to be helped by a good number of committed people. |
|
The 7500 square metre piazza, to which the parvis is linked, is calculated to cater for a crowd of 15 000 people. |
|
In 1999, he found himself at the heart of Government when he was invited to cater for an Anglo-Italian summit. |
|
The pub can cater for up to 50 guests and catering arrangements range from a five-course sit down meal to a finger buffet. |
|
The Tawny Owl can cater for up to 50 wedding guests and catering arrangements range from a five-course sit down meal to a finger buffet. |
|
The community playschool can cater for 40 children and is now full, with a long waiting list. |
|
Multi-use games areas provide facilities to cater for netball, basketball and five-a-side football as well as an additional area for tennis. |
|
There is ample land available at the eastern end to cater for a proper island and traffic calming zone. |
|
He set up the pontifical commission Ecclesia Dei to cater for supporters of the Tridentine Mass. |
|
And a much-needed foldaway kitchen area will also be installed at the back of the church to cater for events. |
|
Not being much of a beer guzzler I am always on the lookout for those entertainment spots that cater for the broad spectrum. |
|
Those that cater for the under-18s with a family room away from the bar, or which open earlier as a coffee shop, will attract more custom. |
|
His jewellery in silver, gold and platinum, is very exclusive and very distinctive, but happily he is able to cater for all budgets. |
|
Unsurprisingly, they are promising a spectacle to cater for the fans who like their touchdowns to come with an extra punch. |
|
Non-traditional crops such as grapes, dates, cotton, tobacco, lucerne and devil's claw cater for a niche market. |
|
There's no need to run to the law for change, there are people trying to cater for you and you fail to grasp your opportunities. |
|
Do you think the notion that it's beneath the dignity of a serious writer to cater for something like television has simply vanished? |
|
For the first time ever, the terror alert level has been elevated to cater for the four-day exercise. |
|
The store's liquor licence was found to cater for off-sales only. |
|
It's a sleepy place with lots of guest workers to cater for visitors, and offers little of the festive culture you find elsewhere in the Caribbean. |
|
|
A range of programmes such as aerobics, dance classes and circuit training will be offered to cater for all age groups and various levels of fitness. |
|
It will cater for toddlers and children up to the age of ten or eleven. |
|
In any case the players have their their own chef to cater for their culinary needs in a luxury hotel perched on a cliff above South Korea's East Sea. |
|
Youngsters have already come up with some of their own designs which cater for younger primary school age children up to teenagers who wanted more energetic activities. |
|
They suggest that, for some considerable time, there will be a need for some non-electronic tollbooths to cater for the irregular users of the road. |
|
The resort also has an hotel and apartments to cater for families and couples and there are plenty of activities for those who get bored lying on the beach. |
|
The crowd is chock-a-block with people who like all kinds of music, and there are only very few acts that can cater for such an assorted group of people. |
|
Teatime involved cooking to cater for four different faddy appetites. |
|
The course will cater for children aged between seven and eleven years. |
|
How can the railways cater for the occasional idiot with a death wish? |
|
The cafe, opened as a feature of the baths in 1937, could be replaced by a dance studio to cater for an increasing trend for indoor exercise such as Pilates and aerobics. |
|
It may not be mountainous enough for truly daring climbers, but Britain's wonderful and diverse countryside can cater for serious hikers and weekend ramblers alike. |
|
It's close to Windhoek, has a gorgeous view, a huge lapa and Houalet is prepared to go to extreme lengths to cater for any event and make it perfect! |
|
Cape Clear Island, one of the last large islands in Ireland without a helipad is to have a helicopter pad to cater for both day and night time landings. |
|
A staff of over 200 full-time cooks, maids, gardeners, builders, drivers, translators and security staff cater for the film student's every possible need. |
|
The communal kitchen will cater for patients in the hospice. |
|
The trattorias cater for the tourists, the bacari for the locals. |
|
The meal plan will be personalised to cater for every palate and includes varieties like mint chutney, and aloo paneer tikki, which are classified as low-calorie diet. |
|
Rocky, 21, headed the men's team as they swapped tiepins for rolling pins to deliver a lunch service and cater for a City function. |
|
Known for their made-to-measure footwear, Duo also do a gorgeous range of sandals and strappy beauties that cater for all foot widths. |
|
|
The Channel Crossing Association was set up at about this time to cater for unorthodox crossings. |
|
Many private taxicab companies also operate larger minibus vehicles to cater for group fares. |
|
To cater for the tram train services, Rotherham Central will have a third platform built. |
|
Rather, they are disadvantaged by technologies and social institutions that are designed to cater for the dominant group. |
|
Tourists have a wide range of budgets and tastes, and a wide variety of resorts and hotels have developed to cater for them. |
|
Channel 4 was required to be a public service alternative to the BBC and to cater for minorities and arts. |
|
The Peak, a new Sports Village, was opened in April 2009 to cater for a range of sporting activities. |
|
Radio Scotland's music output is designed to cater for a wide range of tastes. |
|
A new terminal was built alongside the runway to cater for the additional traffic. |
|
There are many shops, pubs and restaurants in the town that cater for the seasonal tourism. |
|
A tube railway for the Post Office opened in December 1927, that could cater for around 10,000 mailbags every day. |
|
A new library has been built to cater for education purposes and also to increase tourism in the area. |
|
It was one of the earliest hotels on the continent of Europe to specifically cater for the British elite. |
|
Colleges in the town also cater for students of English as a foreign language. |
|
Elderly people may be forced to move to cities where there are doctors and hospitals that can cater for their health needs. |
|
In some areas primary, infant and junior schools cater for ages four to eleven, after which the pupils move on to secondary schools. |
|
There is a special Independent group of the Local Government Association to cater for them. |
|
Our research shows that three to five star hotels will cater for at least one gluten or lactose intolerant guest every day. |
|
Landlords only want to cater for younger drinkers with jukeboxes, pool tables and one-armed bandits. |
|
These are demanding higher specification, higher cost ROVs to cater for their support needs. |
|
|
Loco set up their own Academy in 2013 which is proving popular in the region and is one of the only paddle board brands to cater for kids' sizes. |
|
Ray-Ran states its dedicated CNC milling machine can offer X, Y and Z axis combinations to cater for most test sample sizes. |
|
Owlerton uses the Tavern as a special party area that can also be adapted to cater for Six-Pack patrons, and that is something Gilburn envies. |
|
We already cater for players at peak time, and this is frequently capacitated. |
|
Furthermore, the consultants were honest enough to admit that the passes were not designed to cater for two of the Tyne's most endangered fish, the sea lamprey and the eel. |
|
My class warrior conscious abated, I was grateful a Carrickfergus company had recently set up to cater for tourists wanting to visit or leave the city in style. |
|
Changing face of boys' home AXWELL Park Home Office Approved School was founded in 1847 as Newcastle Ragged School with premises at Sandgate to cater for poor boys. |
|
It gave its name to the Rock Hotel, built as a farm during the Elizabethan period, but converted in the 1850s to cater for growing tourism in the area. |
|
The first phase of a proposed eastern bypass for the city is the Dublin Port Tunnel, which officially opened in 2006 to mainly cater for heavy vehicles. |
|
As a result, many of the local businesses cater for the tourist trade. |
|
Most commercial club sound systems worldwide do not cater for deep bass. |
|
Klosters is here to cater for the rich, the famous, and the wellborn. |
|
The bakery produces on average 300 Chelsea buns, 500 rolls and 100 loaves a day to cater for the 12,000 strong population of Newtown on the River Severn. |
|
There are 67 Durham associations ranging from international to college and sports affiliated groups that cater for the more than 109,000 living alumni. |
|
But the problem is many of the crematoriums in the area cannot handle large coffins so we have to look elsewhere to cater for families who come to us. |
|
Supersoft, supersheer and really just superduper, this buffs onto the skin to give a real glow and with a colour line-up that will cater for any skintone you won't struggle. |
|
Private health facilities are diverse and cater for all economic groups. |
|
Additionally, the island had hotels easily able to cater for the visiting teams, followers and spectators with a traditional goodwill and enthusiasm towards motorcycle sport. |
|
The Minister voiced the government's apperception of all efforts undertaken by the private sector, in cooperation with the public sector, to cater for the consumers' needs. |
|
Now in 5,000sq ft premises in New York Road, the school has a studio with mirrored walls, a dancewear shop and large coffee shop to cater for more than 350 pupils. |
|