Surrey Street’s Mr Fox ‘cocktail pub’ freehold is put up for sale

Yet another Croydon town centre pub has closed, as the food and drink business empire of a colleague of Mayor Jason Perry appears to be feeling the strain.

Freehold for sale: on offer for £800,000, the Mr Fox ‘cocktail pub’ has been run to ground

Signs for Fleurets, a specialist pub and hospitality property agency, appeared above the Mr Fox “cocktail pub” on Surrey Street this week, offering the freehold for sale on the building.

Asking price? £800,000 for a building that has a beer cellar, first-floor kitchens, ground-floor bar area and a three-bedroom flat upstairs.

The freeholder hopes to make the property available with “vacant possession”, once the position with the current leaseholder is resolved.

That current lease is held by one of the web of companies run by Andrew Taylor. Taylor is also the vice-chair of Croydon BID, the town centre’s business “improvement” district.

It was not so long ago that Taylor managed to snag himself a £28,000 culture grant from Croydon Council for a “Surrey Street Festival” that never actually took place.

Businessman Taylor, despite not having any obvious background in the arts, was somehow appointed to the council’s Borough of Culture steering group, the body which decided which projects were worthy of receiving a share of a £1million public arts fund

Big BID: Andrew Taylor, who is also behind Trickle and Fern bars

Taylor was ultimately obliged to return the £28,000 Borough of Culture grant, which was money that might have otherwise been allocated to genuine arts organisations. Of course, all those involved denied that anything untoward had gone on.

Croydon BID, where Croydon Mayor Jason Perry is also a board member, also got a £50,000 Borough of Culture grant, to line the streets of Croydon with fibreglass giraffes.

It’s beginning to look like those not-so-arty giraffes didn’t do much to improve business in Croydon, apart from, perhaps, for Croydon BID.

Taylor holds around a dozen company directorships, including the registered business behind Fern, the top-end cocktail bar at the foot of one of Croydon’s tallest buildings on George Street.

One of Taylor’s companies, Surrey Street Holdings Ltd, has not filed its accounts to Companies House since November 2023. Then, its accounts showed the business had more than £109,000-worth of assets.

Of other companies of which Taylor is director, Fern (George Street) Ltd was recently threatened with being struck off for failing to file its annual accounts in time. Fern’s latest financials, lodged at Companies House, show total assets of just £7,100 (as at August 2024).

Warning signs: Surrey Street Holdings Ltd is one of Taylor’s companies that has formal warnings for late accounts

No34 Surrey Street, on the corner of the alleyway that is Bell Hill, at the Church Street end of Croydon’s ancient street market, was once a proper pub called the Britannia Inn.

It became the highly stylised, up-market Mr Fox in 2019.

Soon after, the proprietors dropped their chips when Inside Croydon dared to highlight that they charged an extortionate £4 for a small bowl of chips and £5 for undrinkable pints of “craft” beer.

For £10, you could book an hour on their shuffleboard.

Then, around February 2025, Mr Fox closed. A suitably gushing announcement appeared (still appears) on their website: “After six incredible years, Mr Fox has closed for major refurbishment and will reopen in Autumn 2025 with a brand-new look!

“We will return with our legendary Sunday roast and cocktail menus, a brand-new beer offering, including real ale, live sports and the introduction of pub games, including a pool table and a dart board.”

Last orders: Mr Fox has been closed since February, ostensibly for refurbishment. But no work was ever started

They had never bothered to sell real ale in their pub before, while the promise of pool and darts appeared to signal the end for hipsters’ shuffleboard.

But no refurbishment works ever seemed to begin, and now, it appears that Taylor’s refurb plans have themselves been snookered altogether.

Mr Fox is the second pub on Surrey Street to be confirmed as closed in the space of a month, after the more down-to-earth Market Tavern closed its doors in September.

Meanwhile, there’s nothing on Croydon BID’s website to reflect the business difficulties facing its co-chair.

But if this is what Croydon town centre is like after 18 years of Croydon BID (whose directors include mall non-developers Westfield, the Centrale management and the Whitgift Foundation’s property managers, as well as those paragons of business Taylor and Perry), imagine what the place might be like by 2040.

Read more: Two more Croydon town centre pubs pull down the shutters
Read more: Five Guys is latest business to give up on Croydon High Street


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News, views and analysis about the people of Croydon, their lives and political times in the diverse and most-populated borough in London. Based in Croydon and edited by Steven Downes. To contact us, please email inside.croydon@btinternet.com
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8 Responses to Surrey Street’s Mr Fox ‘cocktail pub’ freehold is put up for sale

  1. Grumpy Northumbrian Expat says:

    Guessing all is not rosy in Bart & Taylor land, the proposed Darcy’s in Wooler hasn’t started work despite getting planning permission in February 2024 and Instagram posts looking to open this year

  2. Sam Olvier says:

    Another chicken shop incoming….

  3. Barbara Smith says:

    I have come to the conclusion that the people in Croydon just like shit. You go there, it’s full of shit chicken shops. Shit vape shops. Shit mobile phone kiosks. There’s nothing worth seeing or doing there. You get what you deserve and the people of Croydon seem to love dirt. Thank God it’s far enough away from better places that they mostly just don’t leave, living in their filth.

    • Where do you reside Babs? Leafy Bromley? Swanky Shoreditch?

    • andy brent says:

      This is true. It would be one thing if it was way cheaper than somewhere better, but it’s still stupidly expensive. Why anyone would pay 700k to live in a horrible 30s terrace on a horrible dirty street in Croydon rather than just leaving London and getting far more for your money, I will never understand. Perhaps they just love the filth.

  4. Mariko Brown says:

    It is interesting that a couple of the comments ( Barbara and Andy ) have become an attack on people living in Croydon. I wonder why the anger, judgement, and foul language? Some people don’t get to choose where they live due to work and affordability – not sure about the ‘ 700k horrible 30s terrace on a horrible dirty street ‘ ? Sounds completely overpriced for a start and indeed doesn’t sound desirable! I think there are more flats than houses in Croydon now, and many are difficult to sell. I can’t imagine criticising anyone for living in any place without knowing their situation. That would be very judgemental and lacking in empathy, compassion or kindness. But, perhaps there is something very personal going on in those comments above, hence the venting!
    I agree that there is a lot to criticise Croydon / Croydon council for, and I will take this opportunity to thank Inside Croydon for shedding light on the many issues, and, I agree that not everyone is a saint who lives in the borough, much like many other boroughs! But, there are many good people around too. Thankfully!

    • Thank you, Mariko!

      We monitor and approve all comments that are published on this website.

      Many of the unreasoned “Croydon is a shit hole” comments fail to survive our moderators, often because they are anonymous or are simply gratuitous. A bit like the “London’s under Sharia Law” attacks on Sadiq Khan. Our guidelines for commenters are on our “About” page.

      We allowed at least the first of these comments through because of the author’s apparent frustration that another business had failed, in a business sector where there have been many failures, and that another effort at Shoreditch-style gentrification had flopped once again.

      Five quid for a small bowl of chips was always taking the piss. Trying to score a £28,000 culture grant was even worse.

      If Mr Fox, on a street corner site in a usually busy street market, couldn’t make the hospitality trade work, it was only a reflection of the business “brains” behind it, and not the people of Croydon who were never taken in by it.

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