An alehouse has stood on this Grade-II listed site since 1830. Since restoration by Everards, its range of beers has expanded to 11 cask ales, 8 tap dispensed craft beers and 6 tap dispensed real cider's. Previously an East Midlands Pub of the Year winner in 2010 and 2011. Inside there's a cosy atmosphere created by five distinct drinking areas including a snug and three seat 'confessional', once used as a hideaway by the local vicar. The beer garden outside regularly hosts events during the summer and an outside bar offers a further 6 cask ales and 3 craft beers. Snacks available daily.
Historic Interest
The Crown Inn has an entry on Nottinghamshire County Council's Historic Environment Record (HER) No. M 10033 and is a Grade II Listed Building (No. 1248024)."Early C19. Extended and altered c.1980. Brick, pebbledashed and colourwashed. Slate, pantile and clay tile roofs. Rendered plinth. 2 gable and single ridge stacks. 2 storeys, 5 bays, double depth. L plan. Windows are glazing bar and plain sashes and C20 casements. Front has to left door flanked by single sashes. To right, door with overlight, flanked to left by dummy carriage opening and to right by a sash. Above, 4 sashes with hood moulds and to right, a larger sash. To left, ornate lamp bracket, c.1880. Middle Street front has scattered C20 fenestration. Rear has late C20 flat roofed addition and above, 3 C19 casements with segmental heads. Stable has 2 casements flanked by single stable doors and above, a casement and a hatch. Interior has front bar and snug c.1880 with plank dado, glazed screen, herringbone panelled bar and fitted back bar cupboards and overmantel with mirrors. Footrail on cast iron stands (Historic England).
The Crown Inn is located in Broxtowe Borough Council's Beeston West End Conservation Area.
The Crown Inn was registered as an Asset of Community Value on the 6 January 2023, nominated Nottingham CAMRA (ACV 018). This expires on the January 2028.
The Crown has an heritage interior rated by CAMRA as being of National Importance. "The star feature here is the original layout of four rooms, known as The Shambles, retained when this early 19th-century pub was greatly extended in 1976. The original, now subsidiary, door is in Middle Street and leads into a quarry-tiled passage. Through a pair of open doors is a sliding hatch and intact stable door with shelf and part-glazed upper door. The very small public bar on the right has a quarry-tiled floor and bar fittings dating from around 1880. The counter has a herringbone-panelled front and a bowed top of some age while the mirrored bar back contains four small cupboards. The furniture comprises an old bench and three small tables. Beyond another glazed partition wall is a tiny snug, formerly an off-sales. Back in the entrance passage, the snug on the left has old fixed seating on three sides. The Games Room is the last of this suite of old rooms and has vintage dado panelling and fixed seating of different dates. The curved bar counter could well have replaced a hatch in the inter-war era. Dating the panelling is made difficult by its being painted (www.pubheritage.camra.org.uk)."
As at November 2017, the freehold for the Crown (NT443555) was held by Everards Brewery Limited (Reg. No. 319261)
[Broxtowe Borough Council; Beeston West Ward / Broxtowe Parliamentary Constituency]
Three star - A pub interior of outstanding national historic importance
Listed status: II
This pub retains a four-room, probably late Victorian layout. The front entrance leads into a quarry-tiled passage with a double door and a sliding hatch in a door to the servery. The tiny public bar (right) has a quarry-tiled floor and late Victorian bar fittings (a panelled counter and a mirrored bar back with a series of drawers). The furniture amounts to an old bench and three small tables. At the far end is a tiny snug beyond a glazed partition wall, an extraordinary small space which was formerly an off-sales (so named on plans of 1953 which show access from the adjacent covered passage – now panelled over). Back in the entrance passage, the small room on the left has old fixed seating on three sides. The Games Room is the last of this suite of old rooms and has vintage dado panelling and fixed seating of different dates. The curved bar counter might have replaced a hatch in inter-war times. Dating the panelling is made difficult but a long-standing customer insists that this area is unchanged since his first visit back in 1937. The pub was greatly extended in 1976. It serves a fine range of ales and ciders.
Early 19th century pub that, when extended in 1976 by Hardys & Hansons, retained untouched the original layout of four rooms, known as The Shambles, and off-sales hatch and a large new lounge was added. This is one of the finest examples of how to expand the drinking space in a pub without wrecking the original characterful part and was achieved due to the pub being Grade II listed with an interior description and the actions of Nottingham Branch of CAMRA.
The main entrance to the pub is from the car park side but you can still use the original door in Middle Street, which leads into a quarry tiled passage. Through a pair of doors, now kept open, is a sliding hatch and intact stable door with a shelf and part glazed upper door. To the right is the public bar, now called the 'Whisky Bar', through another pair of doors in the wood and glass partition wall. This very small room has a red and black quarry tiled floor (in 2009 the lino covering the tiles was removed) and retains bar fittings which the listing description state date from c.1880. The counter has herringbone panelled front and a top of some age with a bow in the middle; the mirrored bar back with a carved wood surround has a lower section containing four small cupboards and shelves painted a dull green colour. The foot-rail rests on cast iron stands, there is an old bench and just three small tables.
To the right is another part glazed partition wall with a door and beyond it is a tiny snug measuring 8 ft x 5 ft called the 'Confessional' (so called because of its size). This area was previously the off-sales, as confirmed on the plan of 1952. The bar has another counter with herringbone panelled front and there is a small old fixed bench. The doorway from the former carriage entrance into the Snug has been closed off, and matchboard panelling applied to the walls - probably in 1976. The screen between the two rooms looks old, but may have had minor alterations such as some new glass; there is a '5' on the Snug side of the door.
To the left of the entrance passage is the small Snug with a door and on three sides the original fixed seating, which has leatherette padding added; but the former fireplace is missing. The passage continues to the last of the original rooms – now called the Games Room. It has a door, wooden floor, old dado panelling and fixed seating of different dates – part could be either pre-war or from 1976 and an early 20th century tiled fireplace with a wood surround that looks more modern. The curved bar counter could be of inter-war date and may have replaced a hatch - it is shown on the plan of 1952. The panelling in the Public bar, Confessional and dado panelling in the Passage is painted making it difficult to date so some could be modern work.
The rear brewhouse and stable (not public) survive with original stable doors, and are now used for storage.
This Pub serves 7 changing beers (Mostly from local or national microbreweries.) and 4 regular beers.
Crown Inn, Beeston