
Revamped Kirkstone Pass Inn will 'not be aimed' at hens and stags
The newest owners of a historical pub have dismissed rumours its rooms may be marketed at stag and hen parties.Cumbria's highest pub, the Kirkstone Pass Inn, had provided respite for travellers for centuries and was bought by Supreme Escapes in 2021.The firm is renovating the already existing rooms and turning the old keeper's house into holiday accommodation, but said the bar area would not change and operate for the public, whether there was a booking or not.The Lake District National Park Authority (LDNPA) said it recognised concerns about "potential loss of historic character" and had opened an investigation to monitor the use of the building.
The centuries-old former pub stands at 1,481ft (451m) above sea level, on an exposed hillside above Ambleside.It was frequented by visitors who made it up the Kirkstone Pass - known locally as "the struggle" - before it was put on the market in 2021, sitting empty for years.Recent works sparked concerns online about the future use of the site and whether the changes were kept within the building's character and location.
'Almost derelict'
Jerry Huppert, a partner in Supreme Escapes, told BBC Radio Cumbria the building was being renovated sympathetically and they had already spend about £3m on the building."The pub was very, very tired - almost derelict beyond repair," he said.He added while located four miles (6.4km) away from the nearest neighbours, the accommodation was not being marketed to hen and stag parties - as had been speculated online.He added: "Although our company generally specialises in holiday lets, we have recently moved into a new business model of boutique hotels and this is our first one."The building would also continue to operate as a pub, Mr Huppert said, and he was hoping it would reopen in the summer.
Car park plans
Planning manager for LDNPA Julie Birkett said the building was not listed and therefore internal works did not require planning permission, "regardless of their impact on internal historic features or character".She added a previous investigation concluded the building's new and renewed roughcast render was not an act of development as defined by law, and therefore did not need planning permission.Concerns had also been raised online about preserving public access to the pub's car park, which is used by walkers.Mr Huppert said there was a long lease on the carpark to the LDNPA."We have approached [the LDNPA] to see what their plan is at the end of the lease and they said they will touch base to us about a year or two before the end of the lease," he said.The LDNPA confirmed the lease was due to expire in 2029 and renewal options would be considered closer to that date.
Follow BBC Cumbria on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
37 minutes ago
- Reuters
UK's Thames Water may be required to restate accounts, FT reports
June 20 (Reuters) - Britain's Thames Water may be forced to restate its financial accounts for the year ending March 2024, the Financial Times reported on Friday, in another possible setback for the struggling utility as it attempts to avoid nationalisation. Thames Water is trying to understand the consequences of having to restate key figures in its accounts published last year, the report added, citing documents it had seen. Reuters could not immediately verify the report.


The Independent
37 minutes ago
- The Independent
Weak retail sales and falls in key oil and drug stocks stifle FTSE 100
London's FTSE 100 faded into the close on Friday, ending lower, as weak retail sales data and falls in heavyweight oil and drug stocks offset hopes for progress in the Israel- Iran conflict. The FTSE 100 index closed down 17.15 points, 0.2%, at 8,774.65. It had earlier traded as high as 8,847.28. The FTSE 250 ended 74.51 points higher, 0.4%, at 21,148.50, and the AIM All-Share rose 0.95 of a point, 0.1%, at 759.14. For the week, the FTSE 100 closed down 0.9%, the FTSE 250 ended down 0.1% and the AIM All-Share ended down 0.6%. In European equities on Friday, the CAC 40 in Paris closed up 0.3%, and the DAX 40 in Frankfurt ended 1.3% higher. On Wall Street, markets were mixed at the time of the London close on Friday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 0.3%, the S&P 500 was down 0.1% and the Nasdaq Composite was 0.4% lower. The yield on the US 10-year Treasury was quoted at 4.40%, stretched from 4.39%. The yield on the US 30-year Treasury was quoted at 4.91%, widened from 4.89%. Hopes grew on Friday that diplomatic progress could be made towards dialling down the tensions in the Middle East. French president Emmanuel Macron said France and other European powers would make an offer to Iran of a comprehensive diplomatic solution to end the escalating conflict with Israel, AFP reported. French foreign minister Jean-Noel Barrot will meet Iranian counterpart Abbas Araghchi in Geneva 'to make a complete diplomatic and technical offer for negotiations,' Mr Macron told reporters, adding that France and allies Germany and the UK were 'putting a diplomatic solution on the table'. 'Iran must show that it is willing to join the platform for negotiations we are putting on the table,' Mr Macron said. The developments came after US president Donald Trump said he will decide on potential US action against Iran within two weeks. 'Based on the fact that there's a substantial chance of negotiations that may or may not take place with Iran in the near future, I will make my decision whether or not to go within the next two weeks,' Mr Trump said in a dictated message, according to White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt. Stephen Innes, at SPI Asset Management, said Mr Trump's two-week 'thinking window' on whether to join Israel's war against Iran is 'no cooling-off period – it's a ticking volatility clock'. Ipek Ozkardeskaya, at Swissquote Bank, agreed, stating: 'I'm not sure the US buying itself time can be interpreted as a sign of de-escalation.' Brent oil traded lower at 76.49 US dollars a barrel late on Friday from 78.59 dollars on Thursday. The downward correction saw BP fall 2.0% and Shell drop 0.7%. Also weighing on London's blue-chip index, a drop in drugs firms GSK and AstraZeneca, which ended 2.2% and 1.3% lower. Earlier this week, Mr Trump renewed his threats of tariffs on the sector. Also in the UK, investors weighed a sharp drop in retail sales and assessed public sector borrowing figures. Data from the Office for National Statistics showed UK retail sales fell 2.7% in May from April. This was against a 1.3% rise in April from March and worse than the 0.5% decrease expected by FXStreet-cited market consensus. On an annual basis, retail sales decreased by 1.3% in May, compared with market consensus for a 1.7% increase. Rob Wood, at Pantheon Macroeconomics, said while May's month-to-month fall puts a halt to the rapid rise in retail sales volumes over the start of the year, the underlying upward trend of consumer spending growth will resume in June. He noted surveys show that households have rebuilt their 'rainy day savings and are comfortable with their level of assets. We think this will provide a secure floor for consumer spending.' But Callum McLaren-Stewart, at Citi, thinks the figures constitute 'compelling evidence' of a turn in consumer demand and increases the likelihood of an August interest rate cut. Retail share prices were mostly lower. B&M fell 3.3%, JD Sports fell 0.6%, Next fell 0.2% and Marks & Spencer were down 0.7%. Separate figures from the ONS showed UK Government borrowing, last month, jumped to the highest level for May outside the pandemic era despite a boost to the tax take after the chancellor's national insurance hike. Borrowing surged to £17.69 billion last month, the second highest figure on record for May, surpassed only at the height of Covid, from £16.12 billion a year prior. On-month net borrowing slimmed from £20.05 billion. Borrowing for the first two months of the financial year to date was £37.7 billion, £1.6 billion more than the same two-month period in 2024. Lloyds Bank analysts noted the figure was actually £3 billion below what the Office for Budget Responsibility expected at this point. 'It isn't all good news for the Government though. On a cash basis (central government net cash requirement), the Government has had a requirement of £39.9 billion over April and May and that is £7.4 billion more than the OBR benchmark at this stage,' Lloyds added. The pound was quoted up at 1.3467 US dollars at the time of the London equities close on Friday, compared to 1.3429 dollars on Thursday. The euro stood higher at 1.1521 dollars against 1.1468 dollars. Against the yen, the dollar was trading at 145.89 yen, up compared to 145.65 yen. On the FTSE 100, Berkeley Group fell 8.2% as profit guidance fell short of hopes. The housebuilder expects pretax profit of £450 million for its new financial year. Profit in the following year is 'likely to be similar'. The Cobham, England-based company posted pretax profit of £528.9 million for the financial year ended April 30, down 5.1% from £557.3 million the prior year. Revenue edged up to £2.49 billion from £2.46 billion. 'In terms of guidance, the group is now pointing to PBT (profit before tax) of £450 million in FY26, and a similar level in FY27. We suspect that tougher trading, and increased sales incentives are at the heart of this (guidance),' analysts at Peel Hunt commented. 'Currently, we forecast £475 million and £482 million, implying we need to cut our forecasts by 5-6%.' United Utilities fell 1.7% as RBC Capital Markets downgraded to 'sector perform' from 'outperform' after Thursday's capital markets day. Mulberry fell 11% after announcing a £20 million fundraise and plans to cut costs by £5.9 million as part of a restructuring. The Somerset, England-based, luxury handbag maker said it needed further capital to fund its growth strategy in 'light of an even more challenging trading environment'. Gold was quoted lower at 3,366.36 US dollars an ounce against 3,368.94 dollars. The biggest risers on the FTSE 100 were: Melrose Industries, up 17.9 pence at 517.2p; Standard Chartered, up 26.0p at 1,178.5p; Schroders, up 5.4p at 364.4p; Rentokil, up 5.0p at 350.0p; and Prudential, up 12.0p at 894.2p. The biggest fallers on the FTSE 100 were: Berkeley Group, down 340.0p at 3,810.0p; GSK, down 32.5p at 1,402.5p; BP, down 8.25p at 384.7p; Intertek, down 88.0p at 4,646.0p; and United Utilities, down 19.5p, at 1,124.0p. Monday's global economic calendar has flash composite PMI readings in the UK, eurozone and US plus US existing homes data. There are no significant domestic corporate events scheduled on Monday. Later in the week, Bunzl releases a trading statement and Babcock International reports full-year results.


The Sun
40 minutes ago
- The Sun
Billionaire Premier League owner, 55, earns huge win after 12/1 bet on Royal Ascot winner
BILLIONAIRE Prem owner Tony Bloom is coming home from Royal Ascot a few quid richer. The Brighton owner - who is estimated to be worth £1.3bn - watched his nag Venetian Sun go in the Albany Stakes. 3 3 3 Bloom, who has the Seagulls since 2009, has been nicknamed the "Godfather of Gambling". The former poker star started his own betting consultancy firm Starlizard, which now turns over around £100million per year. Bloom co-owns Venetian Sun alongside Starlizard's Head of Football Ian McAleavy. The filly was given a poor draw in Stall 1 under Clifford Lee in Friday's opening race. But Bloom - who is renowned for his knack of beating the bookies - backed her big at odds of 12/1. The two-year-old filly romped home under Lee, netting legendary punter Bloom a windfall after placing a "decent bet". Bloom told Sky Sports: "7-1 looks a good price now, and she was 12-1 this morning as well. "Given the confidence [trainer] Karl [Burke] gave us, we had to have a decent bet. "We had the worst draw in stall one and things didn't necessarily go right for her in the race, but she still won easily. "I might be a bit biased but I'd like to think she's shown something special there. Moment Royal Ascot racegoers hurl punches in vicious brawl in front of shocked punters "We'll leave it to the boss [on her next race], but we're looking ahead to next season and to a potential 1000 Guineas, so that would be something really to look forward to." Following Friday's race, victorious trainer Burke added on Venetian Sun: "She's a special filly. "I was gutted we got the draw that we had and to be honest, she's won despite that because it's not really the way we like to ride her – loads of daylight. "She's got a great turn of foot and she can get in amongst them and use it. "She'll stay further, I think six or seven, she's got a great chance next year of being a Guineas filly but we'll enjoy today and plan for the future."