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Home > Warwickshire >
Birmingham > B15
> Bulls Head
Bulls Head
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Picture source:
Google Streetview |
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The Bulls Head was situated on
Bishopsgate Street. This pub closed in February 2022. The pub had been
acquired by Davenports and refurbished and reopened in only 2016 but was
sold by them following an offer from an investment fund. It was the first
new pub opened by Davenports in 30 years.
The Bulls Head was built in 1901 and was designed by famous Birmingham pub
architects James & Lister Lea and is grade-II listed.
The pub was renamed The City Tavern in the early 1980's and Davenports
reverted to the original name.
The pub was dressed up as The Garrison Tavern for some of the series
premieres of Peaky Blinders which were shown in the cinema across the road. |
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Source: Mick Crowe |
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Listed
building details: |
Public House. 1901, restructured
internally in c.1984. Designed by James and Lister Lea for Ansells Brewery.
Faced externally in terracotta, with glazed red brick and a Lancashire slate
roof. Baroque style. Two storeys and attics. Corner site (entrance now
blocked) with longer elevation to Bishopsgate Street. This has paired bar
windows with arched heads flanking a door and with two further doors to the
left (originally the entrances to the private bar and the gents on the left
and the off-sales on the right). All doors have rectangular leaded
overlights and all openings have dropped keyed heads of the Gibbs type.
Continuous decorative band at first floor level. First floor has seven
windows with 2 over 2 panes all with similar elaborate terracotta surrounds
and with glazed brick between. The attic storey has two dormers with timber
casements and broken segmental pediment heads with obelisks on both the
kneelers and in the central breaks. The Tennent Street front has a paired
bar window and a doorway on the ground floor, the windows above and a dormer
above that all as before. Two chimney stacks with wreathed tops and three
pots apiece. Two storey, two bay wing to right for the kitchen and yard
entrance. INTERIOR. The interior was remodelled in c.1984 when Ansells sold
the pub to a syndicate from ITV. Open saloon with bar of c1984 in stained
wood carrying brass lamps. Screen behind is original to 1901 with marbled
frame, engraved glass, stained wood shelving and leaded snob screens with
hinged lights. Hatch to stairhall of 1901 and hatch to pool room (former
private bar) of 1984. Doorways to external doors at each end of bar are
1984. Very steep staircase with two turned balusters to each head and
stained softwood handrail, lincrusta dado. Pool room has surviving 1901
fireplace with art nouveau iron grate, and tiled surround. Coloured wired
glass of probably 1984. First floor said to have pool room and dining room
(not seen). HISTORY. Original plan said to have been off sales/public
bar/public bar/stair hall/private bar, with the last serviced through the
present hatch to the hall. In c1984 the partitions between the off sales and
the public bars were removed, the bar was rebuilt and the openings between
the hall and the pool room made. The first floor probably originally had a
billiard room and a dining room. The exterior of this pub remains unaltered
and the interior still retains much of interest. |
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Other Photos |
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Date of photo: 2015 |
Picture source:
David Gray |
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