Sunderland Echo

Gin bar plans for disused seafront toilet block site

- Katy Wheeler Katy.Wheeler@jpimedia.co.uk @KatyJourno

A hospitalit­y group, which has had success with ventures including the world’s smallest gin bar, is breathing new life into a disused building overlookin­g Roker Pier.

The Davis Family, which owns and operates Durham’s Tin of Sardines, has announced plans to bring its successful gin emporium and restaurant concept to the city, with the opening of a new venue at Roker.

The family has agreed a 10-year lease with Sunderland City Council for the former Roker Toilet Block on Pier View – next to the Bungalow Café – and is set to invest more than £60,000 into the refurbishm­ent of the site, creating 10 jobs.

This will follow £250,000 investment from Sunderland City Council, assisted by grant funding courtesy of The Coastal Communitie­s Fund, to ensure the premises are ready for a tenant to move into.

The income from the lease will support the Sunderland Seafront Trust, which operates the Roker Pier and Lighthouse tours and the new income will help it to organise a range of seafront events and activities.

Founded by father and son business partners Lord Trevor and Ben Davis, the pair opened the first Tin of Sardines venue on Durham’s historic Elvet Bridge in 2017, with the venue holding just 16 people and stocking over 200 varieties of gin.

The concept proved such a success that the pair opened a second venue in Trevor’s hometown of Poole in Dorset, renovating a former newsagents and contributi­ng to the conservati­on and restoratio­n of the town’s famed shoreline.

Ben, who’s also operated

The Copt Hill in Houghton in the past, said: “The Tin of Sardines business has been a real success since we first opened our doors in Durham three and a half years ago and we’d been mulling over a third venue for some time until we saw the former Roker Toilet Block hit the market.

“As someone born and bred in Sunderland and as a family embedded in the region’s hospitalit­y industry for decades, we knew this was too good of an opportunit­y to turn down and were sold on the idea of bringing

the concept to the city as soon as we set eyes on it."

The plans for the redevelopm­ent of the unit – which the family hopes to have open by summer 2021 – include the constructi­on of an open kitchen, a hanging garden terrace overlookin­g the sea and the offer of an array of cuisines, from breakfasts and coffee mornings to evening brunches and locally sourced seafood and steaks by night.

He added: “With a garden terrace to the rear and an open kitchen and bar, the venue will offer some of

the city’s finest views while serving up some of the finest locally-sourced produce and some of the world’s most sought-after gins.

“We can’t thank Sunderland City Council enough for giving us this unique opportunit­y and we are looking forward to working with local traders as we craft our new offering.”

It follows the news that the team behind Sunderland’s successful Mexico 70 will open a seafood restaurant at an unused storage shelter on Seaburn’s lower promenade.

 ??  ?? Pier View public toilets on Roker seafront is being redevelope­d by Lord Trevor Davis and his son Ben into a ‘Tin of Sardines’ gin bar.
Pier View public toilets on Roker seafront is being redevelope­d by Lord Trevor Davis and his son Ben into a ‘Tin of Sardines’ gin bar.

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