Tuesday, February 05, 2019

CIVIC AWARDS FOR REFURBISHED BRIGG PUB & SHOPS

The Lord Nelson Hotel in Brigg whose refurbishment has won an award for excellence - see Nigel Fisher's Brigg Blog

A Brigg pub and a parade of shops have received civic recognition for enhancing the look of the town centre.
Brigg Town Council's Civic Award winners for 2018 go to the Lord Nelson Hotel in the Market Place and the DDM, Teasdales and Age Concern shops on Wrawby Street.
The council says these buildings have improved the appearance of the town.
The Lord Nelson's refurbishment "has greatly enhanced the Market Place and Brigg town centre."
The refurbished parade of shops, owned by Graham Wilson, "has transformed a previously unsightly location at the heart of the town."
Town councillors agreed unanimously at their latest meeting that both schemes reflect "a great enhancement to the area."
The presentations will take place during the Town Mayor’s Civic Charity Banquet on Saturday, March 30 in the Angel Suite.
The Lord Nelson, which provides food, drink and accommodation, is owned by the Old Mill Brewery, Snaith.
Mine hosts are father and son, Richard and Jordan Smith.
Distinctive circular blue plaques can be seen adorning various Brigg buildings that won in previous years.


The refurbished Lord Nelson Hotel in Brigg Town Centre which the impressed Town Council is recognising with a civic award - February 2019
The refurbished frontage of the Lord Nelson Hotel which has impressed Brigg Town Council - resulting in the civic award

The award-winning, refurbished parade of shops on Wrawby Street, Brigg - February 2019
The award-winning parade of shops on Wrawby Street, Brigg

3 comments:

Ken Harrison said...

Would it be possible, I wonder, if the BTC could provide a list of the annual Civic Awards....folks may have heard of such awards, but probably wouldn't have a clue who won it in 2010, 1997 and so on..
Such a list could prove the substance of an interesting walk about the town.

Wearybanker said...

One wonders if there is anything the Council can do about the buildings which let the town down appearance wise. I'm thinking in particular about the Martins building which is in a shocking state and a home for lots of the feral pigeons.

Ken Harrison said...

Agree Richard....it would seem to stem of there being an absentee landlord....
I have brought this problem to an individual local power-house and strongly suggested that in addition to pigeon mess, the guttering is potentially over-stressed with debris and vegetation.
It could be described as a serious accident waiting to happen.....either the authority needs to urgently contacts the landlord and/or take urgent remedial action to ameliorate the possibility of the cast iron guttering from crashing down.
The other year a pane of glass from one of the upper windows fell to the ground in front of McColls entrance...