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12-10-2018, 12:54
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Going back sixty years, most pubs in the UK apart from the very smallest had a compartmentalised interior layout. Typically, they would have the standard demarcation between public bar and “best room” – the term “lounge” was not yet in general use. Some had a three-level division between public, saloon and lounge, with subtle gradations in clientele and ambiance between the three. Plus, as documented in Basil Oliver’s book The Renaissance of the English Public House (http://pubcurmudgeon.blogspot.com/2014/01/a-lost-world-of-pubs.html), there could be a whole variety of other rooms such as news rooms, tea rooms, games rooms and, at the time, ladies’ rooms.
But, in the intervening period, pretty much all this has been swept away by knocking pubs through into a single-bar layout. The only pubs that still have two “sides” are the few survivors from a past era – the last one I know of that was built in that way was Holt’s Sidings in Levenshulme about thirty years ago. The main reason always advanced for this was that it reflected a more democratic and egalitarian society in which the old class divisions no longer applied, and there’s certainly some truth in that. But it also made pubs easier to manage and supervise, and in the 1960s and early 70s there was also the factor that public bar prices were subject to government price control, which could be circumvented by turning the entire pub into a lounge bar.
However, it didn’t always work out quite as intended. In many cases, rather than everyone happily mixing together in the same pub, the class division moved from one between different bars to one between different pubs. The middle classes used one pub, the working classes another. Near me, there’s a location where a modern craft bar faces a big old sports TV and karaoke boozer on the opposite side of a crossroads. I doubt whether the two share many, if any, customers.
But now, as the Morning Advertiser reports (https://www.morningadvertiser.co.uk/Article/2018/10/09/In-the-zone-hints-and-tips-for-pub-zoning), a growing number of pub operators are realising that there is a need to cater for different audiences within a single venue, and are thus returning to the concept of pub “zoning”. It’s all too easy if you’re not careful for one aspect of a pub to take over the whole place and alienate many potential customers. The comment that “our elderly crowd... wouldn't necessarily want to be sat in a café-style place full of kids” particularly resonated with me.
There are two obvious divisions between different customer groups that often rankle in pubs today. One is showing big-screen TV sport, which brings in a specific crowd who may well put a lot of money across the bar, but which deters those who just want a quiet drink. And allowing children, while key to the concept of family dining, is something that that those who prefer an adults-only environment feel uncomfortable with. Plus, of course, in a more tolerant society there would be a strong argument for a division in pubs between smoking and non-smoking areas.
My suggestion that this meant the wheel turning full circle met with much approval on Twitter – so far gaining no less than 61 likes.
Used to be called having a public bar and a lounge https://t.co/cW9U3WVArK
— Pub Curmudgeon 🍻 (@oldmudgie) October 9, 2018 (https://twitter.com/oldmudgie/status/1049700347768389632?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw) It’s a classic example of the principle of Chesterton’s fence (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Chesterton%27s_fence) – that you should never get rid of anything in the interest of “improvement” without understanding why it had been put there in the first place.


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