Developers Who Leveled ‘Britain’s Wonkiest Pub’ Ordered to Rebuild
The Crooked House was knocked down last summer after a
suspicious fire. Local authorities have now ordered that the owners reconstruct
the site brick by brick.
Megan
Specia
By Megan
Specia
Reporting
from London.
Feb. 27,
2024, 12:13 p.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/02/27/world/europe/uk-crooked-house-fire-rebuild.html
The Crooked
House, a pub in England’s West Midlands that was demolished last year after a
suspicious fire, could soon be rising from the rubble after its owners were
ordered to restore the pub to its former lopsided glory.
The tavern,
known as “Britain’s wonkiest pub” for its slanting walls and floors, was sold
to a private developer in July 2023. Around two weeks later, the pub caught
fire in a suspected arson attack and the developers who had bought it brought
in the bulldozers. Locals were outraged. With the support of local politicians,
they launched a public campaign to see the building restored and someone held
accountable for its destruction.
Now, they
may be one step closer to those goals becoming a reality. South Staffordshire
Council, the local authority for the area where the pub once stood, on Tuesday
ordered the owners to rebuild the pub within three years, restoring it using
original materials and with its original character maintained.
The council
said in a statement that it had “engaged with the owners since the demolition,
but has reached a point where formal action is considered necessary.” An
initial attempt to reach the owners by phone and email went unanswered.
The pub,
located in Himley, a small village just west of Dudley, was not a listed
building, which would have given it legal protection. But it was considered a
“heritage asset” and registered on the Historic Environment Record as a
building of local importance, according to the council.
Roger Lees,
the leader of South Staffordshire Council, said in a statement that a “huge
amount of time and resources” had been put into investigating the unauthorized
demolition of the pub, and the enforcement order had not been taken lightly.
“But we
believe that it is right to bring the owners, who demolished the building
without consent, to account,” he said. “And we are committed to do what we can
to get the Crooked House rebuilt.”
The
building, constructed in 1765 as a farmhouse, began to slouch in the 19th
century because of coal mining under its foundations. For generations, its
window frames had slanted sideways and its walls seemed to tilt at a near
gravity-defying angle, delighting both patrons and passers-by.
Despite its
wobbly looks, the building was structurally safe after being shored up by steel
bars and other supports. But its fate had become as precarious as its
appearance.
In recent
years, the pub had faced financial hardship like so many others across Britain
in the wake of the pandemic and amid a cost of living crisis. The developers
who bought the building planned to convert it for “alternative uses,” local
authorities said at the time. Then last August, a suspicious fire broke out one
Saturday night partially destroying the building. Before the locals even had a
chance to take stock, it was leveled.
Last year
Staffordshire Police said it had arrested six people on suspicion of conspiracy
to commit arson, but no one has been charged and those suspects remain on
conditional bail.
Marco
Longhi, a member of Parliament who represents the area where the pub was based,
Dudley North, said the demolition of the beloved pub “shook our community.”
“So it’s
fantastic news that an enforcement notice has been served on the owners for
demolition without consent,” Mr. Longhi said in a statement posted to Facebook
on Tuesday.
He added
that the owners would be required to “rebuild the site back its former glory,
and I will not rest until the Crooked House is built back brick by brick.” Mr.
Longhi concluded with a warning: “Let this serve as a warning to anyone who
wants to launch an attack on our heritage sites — you will not get away with
it.”
Those
involved in the awareness campaign were hopeful but realistic that it would
still be some time before the pub was restored.
Marie
Stokes, 62, who lives in nearby Wolverhampton, has taken part in protests at
the site since the pub’s demolition and said she was “over the moon” to hear
the news of its potential restoration.
“I am so
proud to have been a part of it,” she said through tears when reached by phone.
“It was a lovely pub, I had many great memories there with my husband who has
now passed.”
The order,
she said, was a testament to the power of a small group of committed people. “I
am in for the long haul, and we aren’t going anywhere,” she said of the locals
who demanded the return of the pub.
The
enforcement notice that ordered the owners to rebuild the pub can be appealed
within 30 days, and if the order is not appealed or the restoration completed
within three years, the owners could be prosecuted.
Campaigners
may find some hope from other communities that have fought similar battles
before. The Carlton Tavern, a 1920s pub tucked away between newer buildings in
London’s Maida Vale neighborhood, was also unceremoniously destroyed in 2015,
igniting local outrage.
After a
long public campaign, the developers who had knocked down the Carlton Tavern
were also ordered to rebuild brick by brick. They may have had a slightly
easier task, though.
Firstly,
the building was not slanting. Secondly, the preservation society English
Heritage had done an earlier survey of the Carlton Tavern as it was being
considered for historical status.
During that
process, the society had created a detailed record of the pub’s rooms and taken
molds of its distinctive architectural features. When it was time to rebuild,
there was a clear blueprint.
Six years
later, as Britain was emerging from a pandemic lockdown, the pub finally
reopened its doors.
Megan
Specia reports on Britain, Ireland and the Ukraine war for The Times. She is based in London. More about Megan Specia
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