White Swan Hotel, Piccadilly

February 2011

Update – For recent updates on this building: see all pages tagged White Swan. This page was written a few years ago and is mainly a history of happenings (or lack of them) during the recent decades of closure.

White Swan, Piccadilly, Feb 2011

This building is locally famous for being empty for as long as anyone can remember. It may also have the honour of being the most regularly complained about building in letters to the local paper.

Every now and then, over the years, there’ll be a letter to the Press asking who owns the White Swan Hotel in Piccadilly, why is it still empty, why can’t the council do anything, etc. So much has changed around it, with so many new developments, redevelopments, apartments, and the White Swan just sits there in the middle of it all, with its boarded-up frontage, resolutely refusing to alter, its cheap plastic signage fading.

It’s only about a hundred years old, dating from 1912, but it looks older because of that black and white timbering thing going on at first-floor level. There was a much older White Swan Hotel here, an old coaching inn, facing onto Pavement, but it was pulled down in order to create this part of Piccadilly and get a through road down to Fishergate. Photos taken by the authorities before the demolition show some proper medieval frontages where there’s now the road.

Detail – White Swan Hotel

The hotel has apparently been closed since the 1980s. A quarter of a century of wasted space. Last time its bars were open the punters would have been enjoying the sounds of Adam Ant, or the Goombay Dance Band. Did bars have jukeboxes back then? – so long ago …

It was briefly occupied by squatters, in 2003, who had a creative response to what many see as a ‘wasted’ building, by not only living in it but tidying it up, renaming it the Rainbow Peace Hotel, and inviting the public to view it, in an ‘Open Day’ event.

The peace symbols and other graffiti on the upstairs windows presumably date from that period of occupation. They’re rather faded now – they were brighter when I took a photo back in 2004.

'Do not open'

High up, in a window at the top of the building, ‘DO NOT OPEN’, painted on the glass. I assume this isn’t some kind of reminder/instruction painted there by the previous owners for the present owners, and referring to the whole hotel, but that it just refers to the window.

Maybe someone did try to open it, and found perhaps that it was no longer attached to the hinges. The place is no doubt suffering a bit from lack of maintenance.

There’s no lack of interest in it though. I know from my Google search stats that the web page on this site with photos of the building in 2004 gets a lot of hits – there are many people Googling ‘White Swan Piccadilly’, and the old ‘who owns ….’ question comes up every now and then.

Other than that, not much has occurred of interest as far as I’m aware, since the ‘Rainbow Peace Hotel’, apart from one incident when a bit of the building fell off and nearly hit a woman who was walking by.

White Swan, and All Saints church tower

Hotel hopes are dashed – August 2006: excited shoppers report workmen at local eyesore. Disappointment follows: ‘The workers were simply replacing rotten floorboards to prevent them collapsing.’

And so it goes on.

Though the building was secured after the squatters of 2003 left, it’s presumably not stayed secure, as my Google searches led me to an incident reported by North Yorkshire Fire Service:

‘9 January 2008 – Rescue from Derelict Building – White Swan Hotel, Piccadilly, York. A man described as of no fixed abode, fell and was trapped 20 ft below one of the floors of the derelict White Swan Hotel.’

The floorboard repairs of two years earlier obviously weren’t extensive enough. And isn’t it a mad world. Some people have no roof over their heads, and are sleeping rough in the middle of winter, while other people have massive buildings they can’t look after and leave boarded up.

This hotel has 50 rooms, apparently.

It was declared unfit for human habitation in 1992.

In a different age, wealthy owners of a building like this, if they didn’t need it themselves, might have donated it to be used by those needing shelter, or sold it at a fair price to a local authority. Instead they’ve let it sit there rotting for decades.

More information & links

The Press ran a really nice article about the occupation of the building and its time as the ‘Rainbow Peace Hotel': Peace lies over the Rainbow (25 April 2003)

A search of the Press archive for mention of this building returned 86 results. Here’s a few of the stories from over the years – reflecting how many times the owners have promised to do something about the building, and haven’t:

Campaign to improve city centre eyesore gathers pace – it obviously slowed down again somewhat, as this story dates from 1998

Action planned over eyesore building – May 2001

This Swan’s an ugly duckling – May 2001: ‘Simply tracing the White Swan’s owners was tough. To find out who they were took detective work that would have impressed Inspector Morse.’

Swan’s on us! – the ‘Rainbow Peace Hotel’ opens – April 2003

Swansong! – and closes, May 2003

Wealth behind hotel neglect – April 2003

Good news for sad hotel – June 2005

Ugly duckling to hatch firms – February 2006: ‘The owners are determined to do something about The White Swan’. Presumably referring to the bit of floorboard they got fixed.

Update

In 2011: according to recent press coverage, the owners of the building now have definite plans to redevelop the site. This has prompted many letters to The Press suggesting the facade should be kept.

In 2012: plans were submitted in September 2012 for the refurbishment and redevelopment of the building.

In late 2013: work began on the renovation and redevelopment of the building.

All pages on the building, and further updates

 

10 comments

  1. Paul B Bennett

    I was asst Manager in 1972/73
    YES we had a Juke box
    it was a thriving hotel owned by a small London Company
    It ids sad that such a nice hotel is empty!

  2. Bill Eastwood

    Dave Riley RIP was bar manager in the Mid ’70s. A good young crowd went in the “Centre Bar”. Huge picture of a Cord car on the back wall. Happy days!

  3. Paul B Bennett

    jHi
    Dave was after my time.
    I was asst manager under Dave Cookson (manager) in 1971-72.
    Claim to fame, banned NUM leader Arthur Scargill from the bar due to power cuts caused by the NUM!
    Had a really great team under me. It was a pleasure to work at the Centre Hotel The White Swan Inn although Centre Hotels were a rather poor company
    I hope that it works as a store

  4. Alan J Morgan

    My mum, Irene Mary Morgan /Frost was listed as a Chambermaid at the hotel in Sep 1939.
    The hotel proprietors were Solly & Ellen M. Morris.
    One of the Barmaid’s was Josephine MacPherson

  5. Angela Lee

    i worked there as a waitress in 1979

  6. Mary wallace

    Coming from Toronto, Canada, I was a bartender at the center bar and at Renoir Bristo a restaurant that was in the basement in 1978. And yes there was a jukebox. It was pretty rundown but I Have a lot of very happy memories from that time as one of “The three Canadians” as we were affectionately called , that worked there.

Leave a Reply to Mary wallace Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>

Thank you for adding a comment. Please note that comments are moderated, but should appear within 24 hours.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.