Sunday, 29 August 2010

Some more equal than others

A few weeks ago I posted some sobering statistics showing that total on-trade beer volumes had fallen more than 40% since 1997, and weren’t much more than a third of what they were at what will come to be seen as the all-time peak of the pub and club trade in the late 1970s. Now, obviously people will counter that by saying “well, I regularly go in the Mole & Meerkat and it’s packed every night”, but that doesn’t alter the cold hard facts. Within an overall declining market, it is still possible for some pubs to prosper, and it is clear that the pain has not been spread at all evenly.

Phil has recently posted on his Oh Good Ale blog descriptions of some of his locals in the Chorlton-cum-Hardy area of Manchester, such as the Marble Beer House. Chorlton is a rarity in that in recent years the number of bars, and of cask ale outlets, has considerably expanded. Indeed it is that kind of area – prosperous, socially mixed, densely-populated, with a noticeable academic and bohemian element – where pubgoing is likely to survive most strongly. There are plenty of similar areas in London, where I get the impression that pubgoing remains noticeably more healthy than in much of the rest of the country. Contrast that with less well-off Manchester suburbs such as Longsight and Openshaw where most, if not all, of the pubs have now disappeared.

The pub and bar scene in Manchester City Centre gives an impression of health, but that is much less so in the satellite towns. I have written before about the devastation of the pub stock in Ashton-under-Lyne. Stockport has done better, but even here there has been a steady drip-drip of closures and there are currently probably at least five pubs in the town centre that give the impression of clinging on for their life.

It is also very obvious from looking at the closed pubs on Google StreetView that the big, purpose-built pubs from the 30s, 50s and 60s, whether roadhouse or estate pub, seem to have fared worst of all – possibly for reasons discussed here, a combination of always being a little soulless and being on spacious sites that appeal to developers.

Outside of the conurbations, in small towns, villages and the countryside, there is surely much more pain to come. Pretty much every non-motorway road journey of any length reveals a fresh pub that is closed and boarded. Now, obviously it is possible to find enterprisingly-run pubs that succeed in locations where many others fail, but even if you are bucking the trend, it doesn’t mean there isn’t a trend.

The question is whether the next ten years will bring just a further thinning-out of pubs, leaving fewer but stronger still standing, or whether we will end up with a situation where large tracts of the country, urban as much as rural, in effect have no pubs at all, as the term is usually understood, and pubgoing will cease to be anything remotely approaching a universal experience. And, of course, in some run-down inner urban areas, that is already pretty much the case.

8 comments:

  1. Smoky-drinky is waiting for you...

    ReplyDelete
  2. Many many more pubs will close over the next few years. The social aspect is rapidly disappearing as drinkers/smokers are replaced by gossiping mums and free crèches.

    Many still have made no provision for smokers outdoors, the cost of pints just goes up and up whilst the staffing quality of pubs goes down and down.

    Even home brewing has improved so much over the years many more now choose to stay at home.

    Smokey/drinky if you can find them will become more popular without a doubt.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Boycott pubs untill they restore
    freedom for all

    Over a thousand in my town have,
    17 pubs have closed and 13 for sale
    25 left but only 3 worthy of
    maybe 1 evening.

    Wetherspoons still managing to
    attract some backstabbers and
    buggy pusher besides the cut price
    Giro brigade.


    We shall overcome(We hope)

    ReplyDelete
  4. Tyson said: "Bring me sunshine..."

    A flippant comment, but surely you recognise that there has been a major, indeed dramatic, decline in the pub trade over the past ten or fifteen years. The oases you frequent may have survived unscathed, but outside of that, in the wider world, huge numbers of once-thriving pubs have closed.

    All I'm trying to do is to point out that some kinds of pubs are much more vulnerable than others, and to analyse the causes of the decline.

    And the post doesn't mention the s*****g b*n once!

    ReplyDelete
  5. Well I didn't say I disagreed with your analysis:)

    ReplyDelete
  6. Thanks for the link! I don't at all disagree with your pessimistic forecast - something I tried to bring out, & will perhaps return to in a separate post, is that all the more-or-less-successful pubs I described were doing something quite distinctive and working very hard at it. Talking about pubs opening sub-post-offices or doing school meals is missing the point in a big way, but I do think that - sadly - just being A Pub isn't enough any more.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Yes, the key point of the post is that, in future, the ability of an area to support a thriving pub culture, as opposed to the odd thriving Spoons or dining pub, will be very much dependent on the type of area it is. Chorlton is a good example of an area where the pub and bar scene is very healthy. Central York, which I have mentioned in the past, is another.

    But go to Ashton or any of the smaller towns in the North-West and a third to a half of the pubs have closed, and many of the remainder are just scratching along.

    ReplyDelete

Comments, especially on older posts, may require prior approval by the blog owner. See here for details of my comment policy.

Please register an account to comment. Unregistered comments will generally be rejected unless I recognise the author. If you want to comment using an unregistered ID, you will need to tell me something about yourself.