News / Hotwells

Historic Bristol pub will be converted into flats

By Adam Postans  Tuesday Apr 9, 2019

Plans to convert a Grade II-listed former pub in Bristol city centre into flats have been given the go-ahead despite dozens of objections.

Councillors followed officers’ advice to approve the proposals for The Pineapple on St George’s Road after hearing the Edwardian facade and pub sign would be retained and a “horrendous” adjoining building with blocked-up windows would be demolished and rebuilt.

Development control committee members heard the property’s historic importance as “a remarkable survivor of the 17th century” was only discovered during a site visit after the plans by Wellington Pub Company were submitted to the city council.

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It was granted listed-building status as a result and the company amended the development to satisfy the authority’s conservation team.

The new development will retain the Edwardian facade and pub sign

A report to planners said: “The closed venue appears as a negative feature of the conservation area and has so for a number of years, with only a very short period of around two months in 2017.

“We have concerns over the subdivision of the property into several flats, as we would with the subdivision of any listed building into multiple properties.

“However, the intended alterations are well managed to minimise harm to the important features of the listed building.

“There is genuine environmental public benefits in bringing the building back into viable use. Overall this is a good proposal.”

Most of the 65 objections, including from Bristol Civic Society and Bristol Pubs Group, were about the loss of the drinking hole, which was formerly popular with LBGT+ customers.

But planning officer Amy Prendergast told the meeting on Wednesday, April 3: “The site has been vacant for some time.

“Ultimately this application would bring this building back into use.

“The newly constructed building would be more sympathetic to the conservation area and the features of the pub are more easily recognised.

“In heritage terms, it is considered an enhancement.

“Seeing as the pub has been vacant for three years with the exception of a few months, it is not considered the loss of the pub will detrimentally harm the social wellbeing of the local community, as it has not been serving the community for that time.”

She said there were lots of different types of pubs in the immediate area, while the report added: “It is considered unlikely that there are many other areas of the city whereby the number of public houses is so great.”

The pub reopened briefly in late 2017 but has since closed

Stephen Clarke, a Green councillor for Southville, said The Pineapple was the first pub he ever had a drink in and was “wearing school uniform” at the time.

He said: “There are quite a lot of drinking possibilities in the city centre, so I’m not too concerned about losing one for these flats.”

Mark Wright,  Lib Dem councillor for Hotwells and Harbourside, said: “I appreciate they’re going to make it look a lot nicer.

“That building to the side is pretty horrendous.

“Now it’s listed, it might be more difficult for it to be maintained as a pub.

“But I’m always disappointed when a landlord deliberately wrecks a business, which is what happened here. It’s a shame to lose a pub.”

Members approved the plans for six flats with conditions, including limiting the hours of construction work after neighbour Matthew Pallett, who suffers physical and mental disabilities because of an old head injury, told them stress and anxiety worsened his condition and was worried about noise levels.

Adam Postans is a local democracy reporter for Bristol

Read more: Pub of the Week: The Pineapple

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