Refusal to change use of existing Scarborough bar over concerns

It wants to change from a 'shop' to a 'cocktail lounge'

Author: Local Democracy Reporter, Anttoni James NumminenPublished 16th Feb 2023

Scarborough Council has refused to change the classification of a town centre bar from a ‘shop’ to a cocktail lounge over concerns about “unsightly waste”.

Philip Akrill’s proposal to have the 1924 bar officially recognised as a cocktail lounge has been rejected by the council over concerns about rubbish disposal.

The three-storey Grade II listed building at 24 Bar Street in Scarborough is currently listed as a shop by the council.

Although the authority noted that the proposed plan was of “a high standard of design”, concerns were raised about “suitable servicing arrangements” and a subsequent impact on amenity.

The 1924 is located in an established commercial area of Scarborough with several retail, café, and mixed-use properties on the same street.

The authority did approve a parallel application from the same applicant which sought listed building consent to undertake internal alterations “associated with the change of use from a retail shop to a cocktail bar”.

However, planning officers stated that the application for conversion had not set out the necessary servicing arrangements, “notably the storage of waste bins”.

According to a report by the planning authority, it received public comments expressing concern that bins would be left at the front of the site, and that “the proposal in its present form would result in the proliferation of unsightly waste bins on the highway”.

The authority’s environmental health team stated that the site would generate “a reasonable amount of waste”, and would require the equivalent of two 1,100-litre recycling bins.

However, the council report states that no provision had been made for the storage of commercial waste.

The applicant, Mr Akrill, told the Local Democracy Reporting Service that he is “working with the council to correct the issue” and that in the meantime the 1924 would continue operating “as is”.

The planning authority said that the lack of a plan would “result in visual and physical clutter” in the area and would “harmfully inhibit the safe and free flow of pedestrians and other traffic to the significant detriment to the amenity of users of Bar Street”.

According to the report, officers sought to engage with the applicant “to advise how the reason for refusal might be overcome” but the applicant “indicated a preference for having the application determined as it stands”.

Planning permission for the conversion was refused on Monday February 13.

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