Southport Visiter

Owner talks about village venture

- BY SAM TALLON

IThe new KOPAR bar and cafe will open on the site of the former Brentley’s hair and beauty salon on Station Road in Hesketh Bank

F YOU had asked Southport businessma­n Steven Lannagan what would be the biggest problem he’d have to face upon receiving the keys to his new business in January last year, a global pandemic would not have been top of his list.

Situated at the bottom of the street that Mr Lannagan lives on, he is hoping his new café and bar, KOPAR, will become the new social hub in Hesketh Bank when it eventually opens.

Mr Lannagan is already the owner of two successful businesses on Lord Street in Southport – the Bottle Room bar and the Copper & Ivy café – and felt it was the right thing to do to bring the quality of his other businesses to Hesketh Bank, just a few miles away.

“There’s not one bar in the village,” he says. The area’s iconic pub, The Becconsall, closed in 2009 to be replaced by a new housing estate.

“I wanted to create a place where people could go and meet and just have a good time.”

The café at the local Booths supermarke­t in Hesketh Bank is the only other opportunit­y to sit in and eat in the village.

Mr Lannagan also seems to have stumbled upon this new business opportunit­y, on Station Road, by chance.

“I probably wouldn’t have chosen that site or even known about it if I lived in Southport,” he said.

However, when he learned of its availabili­ty, he jumped at the opportunit­y.

“I would have hated the fact that someone else had got it.”

This type of opportunit­y led him to owning his second business, Copper & Ivy, a thriving café bar on Southport’s main shopping street, Lord Street, which he co-owns alongside his fiancée Samantha Lee.

When the previous owners retired, Steve made the decision to take the unit, aware that there was already a licence in place and thinking someone would have only made it into a café anyway.

It is also next door to The Bottle Room, the first business that Steve set up.

There are around 7,000 people who live in the fast-growing Hesketh Bank and 300 new houses are currently being built on the Alty’s brickworks site, just a short stroll away from KOPAR.

Steve initially believed KOPAR would open in June 2020, however, he has since changed his plans.

“It would have been open a long time ago but there was no point in rushing it with no money. There’s been no income in two businesses.”

Despite Government helping to support his Southport businesses, Mr Lannagan hasn’t received any financial support for KOPAR.

Mr Lannagan himself was furloughed, yet an administra­tive error on their end saw his fiancée not receive any furlough support, despite being the manager of Copper & Ivy.

Remaining closed during the pandemic has allowed Mr Lannagan to deal with the changing restrictio­ns on bars and cafés. Originally KOPAR was going to be just a bar.

“I’ve made the kitchen a little bit bigger, given that we’re going to be serving substantia­l food.”

Remaining closed throughout lockdowns has also allowed work to be done on KOPAR behind the scenes. Due to the lockdown, Mr Lannagan used selfemploy­ed shopfitter­s who he knew personally to avoid having to wait for companies to start up again.

“When they came out to KOPAR, it was socially distanced in the unit and I gave them the keys and said ‘I want that done, that done and that done’ and they were happy to come out on their own.”

As a local business owner, Mr Lannagan is keen to make sure when customers return to high streets, they support local, independen­t businesses.

“I think it’s a better overall experience rather than going to a high street chain,” he said. “You feel more satisfied in a local business I think.”

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 ??  ?? Steven Lannagan also owns The Bottle Room (left) and Cooper & Ivy on Lord Street in Southport
Steven Lannagan also owns The Bottle Room (left) and Cooper & Ivy on Lord Street in Southport
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