Once a Victorian warehouse, then an umbrella factory, for the past 23 years 80 Great Bridgewater Street has been home to JW Lees boozer Rain Bar.
For most of that time, the pub has remained untouched. In fact, it hasn’t seen much of an upgrade since its initial refurbishment in 1999 when the Manchester brewery first converted the factory into a boozer.
This week, bosses revealed a brand new look following a £700,000 redevelopment of the longstanding canalside pub.
Owners have brightened up its dark wood with flecks of colour, installed new ambient lighting, and transformed the boozer’s ever-popular beer garden into a foliage-filled hideaway using plenty of heaters, potted plants, and covered seating shrouded in ivy.
Image: The Manc Eats
Image: The Manc Eats
The new refurbishment brings the pub firmly up to date with a smart metropolitan style, adding a stunning new centerpiece bar, comfortable dining and drinking areas and roaring, open fireplaces.
The award-winning canal-side beer garden is a magnet for customers in the summer, and the new bi-fold doors now make it easier to access the terraces when the sun comes out.
The redevelopment gives a nod to its industrial background as well as an LS Lowry-inspired pictorial pub sign that captures a resilient Manchester spirit with an eye-catching series of light projections on the gable ends which will improve the site’s visibility at night.
The central bar is at the heart of the building with a lineup of JW Lees’ cask ales and lagers, including Manchester Pale Ale, and Manchester Craft lager, as well as a showcase of JW Lees’ innovative small-batch Boilerhouse beers which will rotate throughout the year.
Image: The Manc Eats
The canal-side beer garden is a huge draw for Rain Bar during summer. / Image: The Manc Eats
The food menu features many pub classics including the Brewery Tower Burger, home-made Steak and JW Lees Ale Pie and a proper Sunday Roast with bottomless Yorkshire puddings and as much gravy as you want.
Speaking on the pub’s refurbishment, William Lees-Jones, Managing Director, JW Lees, said: “We first opened Rain Bar in 1999 when it was welcomed into Manchester’s growing hospitality trade, winning The Publican Award in 2000 for the best new pub/bar in the UK and Manchester’s City Life award for the best beer garden in central Manchester. 23 years and £700k later we are re-opening ready to welcome guests old and new.”
Alex King, General Manager, Rain Bar, said: “I joined JW Lees five years ago and we’ve been planning the refurbishment and re-opening since then and now that Covid is behind us we can’t wait for the summer. It’s a stunning site and I can’t wait to welcome everyone back.”
Feature image – The Manc Eats
Eats
Historic Manchester pub issues apology for ’embarrassing’ toilets and asks for support
Daisy Jackson
One of Manchester’s most iconic pubs, Mr Thomas’s Chop House, is finally undergoing a major upgrade after admitting its building has become an ’embarrassment’.
The historic Cross Street boozer has shared a public apology for the ‘deteriorating’ state of its stunning building.
Mr Thomas’s Chop House is now pleading for support from punters as it undergoes the weeks-long scheme of improvements.
Visitors will find a reduced menu while renovations are taking place.
The pub said that it’s aware that the Grade II-listed pub has been in need of improvement for a while, but explained these works have been hampered by leasing issues.
Mr Thomas’s Chop House explained that it’s been ‘existing on over 30 short-term lease extensions for 8 years while our landlords negotiated with the superior landlord’.
It’s left them unable to invest into the building – until now.
The pub will be adding brand-new toilets downstairs (they said the old ones were ‘an embarrassment’), as well as improving the kitchens and adding a new beer cellar.
In their statement, Mr Thomas’s Chop House said: “First of all, we owe you, our loyal customers, an apology.
Mr Thomas’s Chop House is undergoing a refurb
“Over the past few years bits of our stunning building have deteriorated. The toilets have become a bit of an embarrassment. We are sorry.
“The fact is, we (The Victorian Chop House Company) have been existing on over 30 short-term lease extensions for 8 years while our landlords negotiated with the superior landlord.
“As a result of this uncertainty we haven’t been able to invest into the fabric of the building.
“But now the wait is finally over. And together with our landlords we are finally beginning a scheme of renovations which will return Tom’s to the state it should be in!”
Work began last week and is expected to last for around three weeks.
They also wrote: “Things will be slightly different but we are so excited. Please help us stay afloat while we work to restore Tom’s.”
The brilliant Persian cafe in disguise as a greasy spoon that’s just had a star turn on TV
Daisy Jackson
A family-run, often-overlooked restaurant in Chorlton had a star turn on TV last night, when The Hotel Inspector paid a visit to the Chorlton Metro Cafe.
From the outside, this place looks very much like your run-of-the-mill greasy spoon, and it sort of is, with fry-ups and breakfast sandwiches up for grabs.
But beyond that, this is the spot to come for an authentic, hearty, home-cooked Persian food.
And it’s this strange dual identity that has caught the attention of Channel 5 this year, and given the business a full episode of The Hotel Inspector.
Alex Polizzi and her crew headed to Chorlton earlier this year to assist husband and wife Majid and Zahra in a rebrand to become The Persian Stop (the sign still hasn’t changed, but bear with them here).
During the episode, The Hotel Inspector tackled everything from a menu overhaul to a spruce-up of the restaurant’s frontage, and ran a cost evaluation, hoping to help Majid and Zahra to increase custom.
A full spread of the new Persian dishesMajid at Chorlton Metro Cafe with his new pancake dishFantastic pancakes at Chorlton Metro Cafe
And there were other familiar faces involved too – Channel 5 called on social media experts The Manc (oh wait, that’s us!) to help Majid understand the power of social media.
The couple moved to the UK from Iran more than 20 years ago, and Majid ran a successful construction business – until the financial crisis of 2008.
The pair then poured their life savings into the Metro Cafe, a greasy spoon just across the road from Chorlton tram stop.
Behind the scenes of The Hotel Inspector
They kept the full builder’s breakfasts and mugs of tea, but added a new string of Persian stews and fragrant rice dishes to the menu.
Now, with the help of The Hotel Inspector, the menu puts these ancient dishes front and centre.
Expect slices of syrupy baklava for only £2.80, and traditional stews like khoresh bademjan (slow-cooked aubergines with split peas and lamb) and khoresh fesenjan (saffron, ground walnut and pomegranate chicken).
This is a small business, run by a fantastic local couple, and one of those hidden gems that deserves to be a little less hidden.