Grimsby Telegraph

Our pubs and bars we

- By JAMIE WALLER jamie.waller@reachplc.com @jamiewalle­r2 The Red Lion

IT has been harder than ever to be a pub landlord over the last two years.

Business was already tough – then they were forced to close for months on end during the Covid lockdowns, and many struggled to get enough staff who weren’t self-isolating after being pinged.

2021 saw some owners finally say enough is enough and look at other futures.

Once-popular watering holes could become shops or accommodat­ion, according to planning applicatio­ns submitted over the last year.

Nearly all blame Covid and the problems with the pub trade as reasons why they will never return to their past glories.

Here are some of the northern Lincolnshi­re pubs which are set to disappear forever:

The Albion The Albion

One of Grimsby’s most popular pubs in its heyday could finally be demolished after being ruined by vandals.

The Albion on Cleethorpe Road has become a burnt-out, needle infested.

Images from inside show its sorry state, which has lost all historical merit according to the applicatio­n.

The filthy bar room has been stripped clean, and a table is shown covered with needles, condoms and the odd beer mat.

The applicatio­n which gives a peek inside the derelict building says: “Due to vandalism and arson, there is little if any detail of architectu­ral or historical merit remaining.”

Extensive fire damage has left some of the walls and ceiling blackened.

The building is so damaged that it would require “considerab­le difficulty and expense” to save any historical features.

Owner Surrinder Mehat of Bradford-based Metro C21 Stores would like to replace it with a community store.

The Red Lion

A struggling North Lincolnshi­re pub has become unviable after the lockdown added to woes from years of poor business.

The Red Lion in Broughton is now seeking to get out of the industry, with a planning applicatio­n lodged to become a convenienc­e store.

The proposal, which has been submitted by Scawby-based company Durable Systems, says that this is a chance for the community to secure a future use for the building.

“A community facility with a future is required for our redundant buildings or very quickly our high streets will become redundant in themselves. This subsequent­ly leads to derelictio­n and rising crime rates,” the applicatio­n says.

No decision has been made on the plans yet.

New plans have been announced for the nightclub venue once known as Secrets and Musika.

The first-floor venue on Victoria Street hosted a cabaret bar which was popular with the LGBT community, and later became known for its retro nights under the Musika name, but there is little chance of it reopening. Instead, DMC Architectu­re Lim

ited have asked for permission to build a second storey extension and create a total of 13 flats.

The plan says: “Due to the economic downturn and lack of demand for the premises, it is no longer viable to sustain the upper floors of the premises, and therefore, a change of use to residentia­l units is being sought to preserve and maintain the building’s future.”

The ground floor business would

There has been a pub on the site in Broughton since the 1800s, with the current Dog and Rat being constructe­d in 1957.

It closed in January 2018 as the traditiona­l pub trade entered a “severe decline”.

The operators of the pub say that the Covid pandemic “renders this industry in even greater peril” and it will likely never reopen.

With no interest in taking it over, an applicatio­n has been submitted to convert it into a house which would improve its run-down appearance.

The plans are currently being reviewed by North Lincolnshi­re Council.

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Former Secrets and Musika nightclub on Victoria Street.
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remained unchanged.
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Inside The Albion.

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