Proposals by Burrell Foley Fischer for the refurbishment and remodelling of the White Lion Pailton, have received Planning Permission and Listed Building Consent. The aim of the community led project is to restore and renew the building and grounds and establish a sustainable community business at the heart of the village.
The White Lion is a much-loved 18th century coaching inn, at the heart of the village of Pailton, North Warwickshire. It is Listed Grade II and has been at the heart of its community for over 300 years. Over this time, the pub continuously changed and adapted to meet local needs, but it has retained both its architectural and social significance. There are clearly legible parts of the original timber framed structure still in place, along with evidence of former stables and domestic outbuildings.
The context of the site is very much a key focal point along the village’s main street. The pub is well set back from the road, with land to both the sides and rear. This established setting creates a strong visual and heritage focus for the village and its community. The pub has, however, been closed for seven years, and is in poor repair. Its condition is fragile and deteriorating – without a plan for restoration now, this building, so important to the identity and history of the village, will be lost.
The local community mandated Pailton Parish Council, via the Pailton White Lion Working Group, to purchase the White Lion and since then the Working Group has carried out extensive community consultation to establish local residents’ priorities for what the site needs to provide for the village and the local area. These community consultations provided a very clear set of aspirations for the future of the White Lion and informed the plans that have now secured planning permission.
In summary, the reimagined White Lion will provide: a community shop; a pub and café/restaurant, extending into the grounds to the side and rear; workspace for artisan producers and makers in the one-time stable block and in the main building during quieter times; overnight/holiday accommodation on the upper floors; outdoor space for eating out, farmers’ and makers’ markets and a wide range of community activities.
The project has been supported by the National Lottery Heritage Fund (NLHF) and the Parish Council now awaits the result of their application to the fund for a grant to deliver the project.