For most of the last quarter of a century the building
which houses the Tap was home to the ‘York Model Railway,’ a small, much
overlooked, attraction. Yet, in early 2011 it decided to
move to a site in Lincolnshire and it was
at this point that Pivovar, owner of the Euston and Sheffield Taps, as well as
Pivni in York city centre, moved in. The decision by East Coast, the Train
Operating Company that manages York Station, to allow Pivovar to inhabit the
building was important for railway heritage. The building is Grade II listed and as such
special care had to be taken with it. Indeed, the process of renovating and
revealing the neglected interior cost £250,000, including a contribution of £75,000 from the
Railway Heritage Trust.[1]
This money was clearly worth it, and entering the building is a bit like going back in time. Never, in all my drinking days have I experience a pub which satisfies two of my loves: railway history and good ale. Thus, after my visits I began thinking about the history of the
Tap building and was resolved to investigate. Much to my surprise, after only a
short period of digging I found an article in The British Architect describing the building’s construction and interior.
The building that the Tap uses was originally opened in February 1907 by the North Eastern Railway (NER) as the station’s tea room. It seems
that around the same time the NER may have been in the process of expanding tea rooms facilities at its large stations, as the article on the York establishment was accompanied by another describing a new tea room
at Hull (now a Pumpkin Café). Indeed, the Hull and York tea rooms, as well as
their interiors and furniture, were both designed in an art-nouveau style by Mr
W. Bell F.R.I.B.A., the company’s architect.
The British Architect
indicates that many of the features of the tea room have been restored in
the Tap. The floor space was 2,500 square feet and, like at present, there were
two doors, one facing the city and another opening onto the station platform. These
two entrances were situated so that ‘the ordinary public, as well as
passengers, may use the room.’ The only difference was that the room originally
possessed ‘draught-proof’ revolving doors, whereas currently the Tap has
regular ones.
The building's design was originally governed by the
position of the pre-existing roof columns and spandrils. Indeed, these were
incorporated into the tea room, with fretwork added to the columns to
hide the fact that they were part of the station’s main structure. Furthermore, the
joy with the current interior is that the colours are very similar to those adopted in 1907. The walls were ‘finished in crimson,’ the ceiling was cream and the woodwork was white.
The furniture and counter were executed in ‘dark mahogany,’ and the floor,
which remains to this day, was a mosaic with an ornamental border. The only significant departures in the Tap from the 1907 features is that the counter and furniture are in different positions and are of a different design, and there is an absence of floor rugs (as shown in the pictures). Nevertheless, what has been accomplished when sitting in the Tap today is a wonderful sense of history and nostalgia.
Lastly, a nod should go to those who created the
structure in 1907. The contractors for its building were Messrs Blackett and Son of
Greencroft East, Darlington, and the instillation of the mosaic's terrazzo paving was entrusted to Messrs Diespeker of 60 Holborn Viaduct, London.[2]
Overall, what has been restored at the York Tap is not
just the fact that the building is again quenching the thirsts of passengers. By the
early twentieth century, class distinctions in station waiting and refreshment
rooms had been mostly abandoned across the railway industry and, thus, the NER
created a facility worthy of both first and third class passengers. Therefore, what
Pivovar have recreated within the York Tap is an example of the railway
refreshment room’s last stage of development before the First World War, a
period when passenger travel was at its most comfortable. Indeed, for this act
of preserving railway history (combined with providing copious amounts of
beer), I cannot heap on them enough praise.
Visit the York Tap’s website HERE
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[1] http://www.yorkpress.co.uk/news/9366138.New_pub_taps_into_the_real_ale_market
[2] The British
Architect, 27 February 1907, p.127
Nice
ReplyDeleteVintage buildings like this one are my inspirations for our home renovation. I'm glad they restored this building to its glory days.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful restoration.
ReplyDeleteWish the floor had been levelled with the platform.Fallen out of the Tap many times
ReplyDeleteJust left the York tap ,never let's you down . Even with the modern trains it has a nostalgic feel ,mind you they do have a look of a A4 Pacific. Dogs welcome is a bonus too
ReplyDelete