UK pubs still closing at a rate of 14 a week

The number of pub closures has dropped slightly from a rate of 18 a week last year, thanks in part to CAMRA’s success in achieving new local planning protection for pubs in England, but remains high at 14 a week.

Four years ago, the rate was much higher at a rate of 29 per week in 2014. Since then, a number of initiatives have been launched by CAMRA alongside MPs to ease the rate of decline in the on-trade.In march 2017, the treasury announced it would ease business rates for 90% of pubs, providing a £1,000 discount to business rate bills for all properties with a rateable value below £100,000. [ . . . ]

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5 of the oldest pubs in Scotland well worth a visit

We take a look at some of the contenders for the crown of “Scotland’s oldest pub”.

1. Sheep Heid Inn

Considered to be the oldest pub in the capital (if not the country) there is said to have been a drinking establishment here ‘ in one form or another since ‘ since around 1360 [ . . . ]

Continue at: 5 of the oldest pubs in Scotland well worth a visit – The Scotsman

London Pubs Named After Fictional Characters 

Dotted around our fair city are plenty of pubs with chin-stroke-inducing names. A plethora of these reference obscure traditions. Some tell of unusual past lives the building once had. Others, are named for figures of local interest. And finally some are named after people — or animals — that only exist in works of fiction. Today, we’re focusing on that last category, fictional characters immortalised in London’s pubs.

The Owl and the Pussycat, Ealing/Shoreditch

There are two The Owl and the Pussycat pubs in London, both inspired by Edward Lear’s masterpiece. Let’s start with the lesser known of the two, The Owl and the Pussycat micropub in Ealing. This is west London’s first micropub, and it’s taken up residence in a former children’s bookshop. The pub serves beers from the owners’ Marko Paulo microbrewery based in the back room, along with kegged beers, which is rather unusual for a micropub.

Amusingly, the pub’s website has an employee of the month competition. By August 2018 the pussycat had won the title 13 times, compared to the owl’s paltry eight.

The other pub named after Lear’s poem lives in buzzy Shoreditch. Or perhaps it’s the other way round; on some Friday evenings it feels like Shoreditch’s buzz emanates from The Owl and the Pussycat and the swell of people spilling out onto the street. This is much more than a post-work drinking hole though — there’s an extensive menu offering pies, roasts, fish and chips and other pub classics. But if it’s booze you’re after, then head upstairs to the dedicated cocktail bar enticingly/unnervingly (delete as appropriate) called The Jago.

The Owl and the Pussycat (Ealing micropub), 106 Northfield Avenue, W13 9RT

The Owl and the Pussycat (Shoreditch), 34 Redchurch Street, E2 7DP

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A quarter of pubs close in the past decade

Closing Pubs
Closing Pubs

Pub numbers decline by a quarter according to the ONS.

Figures from the Office for National Statistics have shown that more than 11,000 pubs have closed since 2008.

It shows that small independent pubs represent the biggest number of closures with pubcos consolidating estates and focusing on large, high turnover bars.
The ONS data showed that the total number of boozers has fallen from 50,000 in 2008 to 39,000 in 2018.
That means almost one in four pubs has closed in only a ten year period – but the story isn’t all negative.

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