The first airing of Jon Richardson's
Channel 4 series Yorkshire pub rescue presents a timely opportunity to look closely at the sticky issue of our peculiarly British, permanent pubs crisis.
For most of British history, beer and the pub formed a single system. Beer created the economic basis for the alehouse; the alehouse evolved into the public house; and the public house became one of the country’s most important secular institutions - places where people gathered without appointment, membership, or hierarchy.
That system endured because it worked. It was commercially viable and socially valuable at the same time.
Over the last fifty to seventy years, within living memory, that joined-up system has been dismantled. What is striking is not only the scale of pub closures, but how poorly the national conversation explains them. Beer and pubs are now discussed as separate industries. Structural questions about ownership, supply, incentives, and stewardship are routinely sidelined. Debate circles around taxation, regulation, or changing habits, while the underlying architecture of the sector remains largely untouched.
After decades spent inside pubs - running them, rebuilding them, and speaking to people across the trade - it becomes clear that this gap between narrative and reality sits at the heart of the crisis.
I did not grow up in a pub-going family. My parents were educators, active in Methodist and Quaker communities. Their social worlds revolved around teaching, research, and congregational life rather than licensed spaces. They were, however, deeply serious about civil society: about responsibility, cooperation, and how communities hold together. They were not prescriptive about belief. From a young age they were comfortable with me being atheist, provided I understood my obligations to others.
My mother worked in social science. At one point she observed, without sentimentality, the work I was doing in hospitality might have more immediate, material value to people’s daily lives than much of the formal social work she was engaged in. She meant the everyday work of making people comfortable, welcome, and at ease; providing places where people could sit, talk, and feel less alone. My father, although not a pub-goer himself, recognised pubs as places where people without religious affiliation still found fellowship and belonging. Those early influences shaped how I came to understand the pub - not as a lifestyle venue or retail unit, but as civic infrastructure.
In the mid-1990s I took on the lease of a pub that was, in practical terms, dead. The doors were open, but the building had no life in it. I had been a regular customer for around a year beforehand and often found myself alone in the space, day or evening. I did not take the lease speculatively. I had a clear operating concept based on experience in hospitality and a direct understanding of local demand.
When the pub reopened, the change was immediate. In the first week the business took around £9,000. By the summer months it was averaging around £20,000 per week - these were substantial figures at the time. This did not surprise anyone with serious experience of running pubs. The fundamentals were simply put back in place: professional standards, appropriate staffing, food and drink people actually wanted, and a pub that functioned as a genuine local meeting place. Within the trade, this kind of turnaround is not exceptional. It is normal when pubs are properly set up.
The difficulty lies in how this reality appears on paper. A pub trading at close to zero looks incapable of supporting meaningful turnover. In practice, restoring relevance can move a site from dormancy to half a million pounds a year or more.
As part of rebuilding the offer, I sought and received permission from the then pub company to stock small quantities of non-tied bottled beers because customers were asking for them. The volumes were negligible and fully understood. When the freehold later changed hands, that same decision became the basis for legal action. The case went to the High Court. The financial and operational impact was severe. This was not about volume or commercial threat. It revealed a structural tension: site-level innovation, even when demonstrably successful, can conflict with portfolio-level control of supply and risk. That tension is not personal. It is systemic.
The pub sector is genuinely complex. There are vertically integrated family brewers, national chains, restaurant-group pub brands, managed houses, leased and tenanted estates, and genuinely independent freeholders. Large groups operate multiple brands pitched at different demographics and price points. To customers these appear as distinct choices. Structurally, they are variations within single portfolios. At the tied end of the market, dozens of lease structures exist. When questioned by regulators or parliamentary committees, executives can accurately say that no two agreements are the same.
In practice, this complexity fragments accountability and frustrates scrutiny. When everything is different, patterns are easier to deny. Yet the same dynamics recur: control of supply, asymmetry of information, rent assumptions based on narrow operating models, and limited tolerance for deviation that complicates estate management. Complexity does not remove responsibility. It obscures it.
Demand for pubs has not disappeared. The need for accessible places of congregation is widely recognised, particularly as loneliness and social fragmentation increase. What the market has not provided is a stable, scalable ownership and operating model that protects pubs as civic institutions while allowing them to evolve. Different ownership models produce markedly different outcomes under the same external conditions. That alone indicates that closures are not simply the result of taxation or changing habits. The failure is architectural.
Individual publicans cannot redesign capital structures, remove extraction incentives, protect assets in perpetuity, or align risk and reward across hundreds of sites. Those are system-level functions.
Once this is acknowledged, the range of credible responses narrows. The pub crisis can't be solved one pub at a time. The forces that undermine pubs operate at a scale no individual can counter. What's required is a different kind of pub company - designed explicitly around evidence, history, and long-term stewardship rather than short-term extraction.
This isn't an argument against business. It's an argument for better business, designed to serve common good as well as balance sheet. Pubs persist because hyper social humans, the beings we are, need places to meet, talk, argue, celebrate, and to belong. That need has not diminished. It never will. What's diminished is the system that once met it reliably.
The crooked house cannot be straightened by repainting its walls. Its foundations need attention. This is not a manifesto. It's an invitation to stop explaining the problem of the pubs crisis away and instead create conditions under which pubs can once again be stable, trusted, and socially useful institutions.
Because when the last pub in a community has gone, the question is never whether it mattered. It's why people didn't act when there was still time? Innit?
For most of British history, beer and the pub formed a single system. Beer created the economic basis for the alehouse; the alehouse evolved into the public house; and the public house became one of the country’s most important secular institutions - places where people gathered without appointment, membership, or hierarchy.
That system endured because it worked. It was commercially viable and socially valuable at the same time.
Over the last fifty to seventy years, within living memory, that joined-up system has been dismantled. What is striking is not only the scale of pub closures, but how poorly the national conversation explains them. Beer and pubs are now discussed as separate industries. Structural questions about ownership, supply, incentives, and stewardship are routinely sidelined. Debate circles around taxation, regulation, or changing habits, while the underlying architecture of the sector remains largely untouched.
After decades spent inside pubs - running them, rebuilding them, and speaking to people across the trade - it becomes clear that this gap between narrative and reality sits at the heart of the crisis.
I did not grow up in a pub-going family. My parents were educators, active in Methodist and Quaker communities. Their social worlds revolved around teaching, research, and congregational life rather than licensed spaces. They were, however, deeply serious about civil society: about responsibility, cooperation, and how communities hold together. They were not prescriptive about belief. From a young age they were comfortable with me being atheist, provided I understood my obligations to others.
My mother worked in social science. At one point she observed, without sentimentality, the work I was doing in hospitality might have more immediate, material value to people’s daily lives than much of the formal social work she was engaged in. She meant the everyday work of making people comfortable, welcome, and at ease; providing places where people could sit, talk, and feel less alone. My father, although not a pub-goer himself, recognised pubs as places where people without religious affiliation still found fellowship and belonging. Those early influences shaped how I came to understand the pub - not as a lifestyle venue or retail unit, but as civic infrastructure.
In the mid-1990s I took on the lease of a pub that was, in practical terms, dead. The doors were open, but the building had no life in it. I had been a regular customer for around a year beforehand and often found myself alone in the space, day or evening. I did not take the lease speculatively. I had a clear operating concept based on experience in hospitality and a direct understanding of local demand.
When the pub reopened, the change was immediate. In the first week the business took around £9,000. By the summer months it was averaging around £20,000 per week - these were substantial figures at the time. This did not surprise anyone with serious experience of running pubs. The fundamentals were simply put back in place: professional standards, appropriate staffing, food and drink people actually wanted, and a pub that functioned as a genuine local meeting place. Within the trade, this kind of turnaround is not exceptional. It is normal when pubs are properly set up.
The difficulty lies in how this reality appears on paper. A pub trading at close to zero looks incapable of supporting meaningful turnover. In practice, restoring relevance can move a site from dormancy to half a million pounds a year or more.
As part of rebuilding the offer, I sought and received permission from the then pub company to stock small quantities of non-tied bottled beers because customers were asking for them. The volumes were negligible and fully understood. When the freehold later changed hands, that same decision became the basis for legal action. The case went to the High Court. The financial and operational impact was severe. This was not about volume or commercial threat. It revealed a structural tension: site-level innovation, even when demonstrably successful, can conflict with portfolio-level control of supply and risk. That tension is not personal. It is systemic.
The pub sector is genuinely complex. There are vertically integrated family brewers, national chains, restaurant-group pub brands, managed houses, leased and tenanted estates, and genuinely independent freeholders. Large groups operate multiple brands pitched at different demographics and price points. To customers these appear as distinct choices. Structurally, they are variations within single portfolios. At the tied end of the market, dozens of lease structures exist. When questioned by regulators or parliamentary committees, executives can accurately say that no two agreements are the same.
In practice, this complexity fragments accountability and frustrates scrutiny. When everything is different, patterns are easier to deny. Yet the same dynamics recur: control of supply, asymmetry of information, rent assumptions based on narrow operating models, and limited tolerance for deviation that complicates estate management. Complexity does not remove responsibility. It obscures it.
Demand for pubs has not disappeared. The need for accessible places of congregation is widely recognised, particularly as loneliness and social fragmentation increase. What the market has not provided is a stable, scalable ownership and operating model that protects pubs as civic institutions while allowing them to evolve. Different ownership models produce markedly different outcomes under the same external conditions. That alone indicates that closures are not simply the result of taxation or changing habits. The failure is architectural.
Individual publicans cannot redesign capital structures, remove extraction incentives, protect assets in perpetuity, or align risk and reward across hundreds of sites. Those are system-level functions.
Once this is acknowledged, the range of credible responses narrows. The pub crisis can't be solved one pub at a time. The forces that undermine pubs operate at a scale no individual can counter. What's required is a different kind of pub company - designed explicitly around evidence, history, and long-term stewardship rather than short-term extraction.
This isn't an argument against business. It's an argument for better business, designed to serve common good as well as balance sheet. Pubs persist because hyper social humans, the beings we are, need places to meet, talk, argue, celebrate, and to belong. That need has not diminished. It never will. What's diminished is the system that once met it reliably.
The crooked house cannot be straightened by repainting its walls. Its foundations need attention. This is not a manifesto. It's an invitation to stop explaining the problem of the pubs crisis away and instead create conditions under which pubs can once again be stable, trusted, and socially useful institutions.
Because when the last pub in a community has gone, the question is never whether it mattered. It's why people didn't act when there was still time? Innit?
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