Tuesday 8 March 2022

Taking flight

In the 1990s, I worked for five and a half years at British Aerospace in Woodford a few miles south of Stockport. The factory and associated aerodrome finally closed down in 2011, and since then a large new development of upmarket homes called Woodford Garden Village has been built on the extensive site. It has now gained its own pub in the form of the Aviator, built by local family brewers J. W. Lees, which opened a couple of weeks ago. It is, I believe, the first brand new pub to be constructed (as opposed to converted from other use) in the Stockport MBC area this century.

It is situated at the entrance to the estate on the junction with the main road, rather than being tucked away in its depths, which gives it added visibility. In fact I would have been able to see the location from my office window. Lees are reported to have spent £900,000 on the site alone, and probably at least as much again on the building itself. It’s a substantial although fairly unassuming building of traditional red brick with a pitched roof. The words “Pub and Dining” on the sign give a fair idea of what to expect.

On the south side is an extensive outdoor drinking area, although as this is entirely paved and furnished with stainless steel tables and chairs it can’t really be described as a beer garden. The spacious interior is basically L-shaped. At the rear on the left is a dedicated dining area in a conservatory-type section. Further forward is a smart, food-oriented lounge as shown in the photo, which does feature both bench seating and a carpet.

Along the front of the pub on the opposite side of the door are a more pubby area facing the bar, with more bench seating, and then at the far end a snug-type area incorporating the “corner shop” window feature, with more carpet, wood panelling and a painting of the brewery founder J. W. Lees himself over the fireplace. These latter two sections are entirely congenial places just to have a drink if you’re not dining. There were no beermats in evidence on my visit, and no TV sport. One feature that I didn’t like was that the toilets were upstairs – surely in a new-build pub on an extensive site this really isn’t necessary for space reasons. The stairwell houses a montage of photos related to the site’s aviation history as shown below.

On the bar were three cask beers – Lees MPA and Bitter, and their latest seasonal Dray Rumble. As befits the general atmosphere, the MPA was £4.25 a pint and the Bitter £4.35. The Bitter I had was in very good condition. While it does stock Carlsberg and San Miguel, Lees strongly promote their own Original and Manchester Craft Lagers. The menu is what you would expect in such an establishment, with the first main course being Braised Lamb Shank at £16.95, and a burger setting you back £13.95.

Clearly as a smart modern dining pub it’s not really my kind of place, but I’m sure it will prove very popular, and it’s probably a lot better than it would be if it had been developed by the likes of Greene King. It is positive that it has been built by a local family brewer, that it features good cask ale prominently on the bar, and that non-diners are made to feel welcome too.

The passage of time will no doubt make it feel less clinical and more lived-un. But I do have to wonder to what extent it will actually function as a social centre for the neighbouring estate as opposed to just another destination dining pub. But, as I wrote back in 2019, residents of new housing developments don’t seem to be very keen on going to the pub anyway.

Although it is similarly food-focused and also charges over £4 a pint, you will find a much better pub atmosphere at the Davenport Arms half a mile down the road, to which the local CAMRA branch had presented an award for 35 consecutive years in the Good Beer Guide only the previous weekend.

(Apart from the one of the photo montage on the stairwell, all the pictures of the Aviator are taken from the pub’s own website and Twitter page, as on my visit it was pouring with rain).

8 comments:

  1. Nice to see the bar stools or high chairs getting thoroughly tested.
    I worked there, Woodford hangars, between 1980 and 1984 as a visiting radar engineer.
    Some things stick in my mind.
    The main reception had a stunning blonde behind the desk.
    The working conditions for the fitters at their work stations along hangar side walls were Dickensian.
    And our lunches in the Davenport. The beer was good. good too. Barnsley Chop comes to mind. Different times. Lunch was an hour, usually consisted of two or three pints and the substantial bar meal.
    Good times.We worked hard, but enjoyed it.

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  2. I drove around this new estate a few months ago and was astounded at the size and high quality of the houses being built. It seemed very "Stepford Wives". I didn't see the pub, but I'll visit it at some point for a half (not a pint at those prices).

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    1. On the link I used, the cheapest houses being advertised were over £1 million, although I think there are some cheaper ones on the estate too. I don't think the people who pay that kind of money are really likely to be pubgoers.

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    2. I live not too far from Ponteland, outside Newcastle. Plenty of houses near there worth a million and much more but lots of folk from them use the pubs.

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    3. Well, I can think of several examples around here of pubs in well-heeled, but well-populated areas, that have closed.

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  3. This place will have to stand or fall on its food offering. The Woodford Garden Village residents are hardly the type to use it as their local boozer. They may go in for meals but not just for a drink unless its once a year around Christmas.

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  4. Priced to keep the rough sorts out, I am glad to see.

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    1. Apparently they won't admit people in working clothes either. Prices at the Davenport Arms are similar - if you want a cheap pint, you need to go a couple of miles down the road to Poynton Spoons.

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