Historic pub that burnt down set to be demolished

An aerial shot of the pub shows the building has been gutted. Only the foundations and part of the facade remain. Two police cars are parked in the car park. To one side is a white marquee.Image source, Drone Photos Sandy
Image caption,

Aerial footage shows the extent of the damage caused by the fire at the Chequers Inn

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A 17th Century pub destroyed by fire is set to be demolished due to health and safety concerns.

The fire broke out at the Chequers Inn in Wootton, near Bedford, on 19 September. An inquest heard the building was set alight by the landlord, who later shot himself and died.

David Palmer, the director of the company that owns the pub's freehold, said it had to get planning permission and listed building consent to have it torn down.

An application, external has been submitted to Bedford Borough Council, which says all the first floor and roof timbers were destroyed in the blaze, with only fragments of charred framing and sections of unstable masonry remaining.

The application's heritage statement said the pub had high historic interest as a social hub for more than 200 years.

However, the fire left no meaningful historic fabric for conservation, according to the Local Democracy Reporting Service.

The front of the Chequers Inn before the blaze, with greenery outside and a tiled roof that has bowed over the centuries. There are empty parking spaces outside. One of the spaces is marked for disabled users and another space has a traffic cone on it.Image source, David Palmer
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Police were called to the Chequers Inn in Wootton on 19 September

An inquest last month heard the landlord, Hervé Louis Appert, died after shooting himself with a crossbow having set fire to the pub.

Mr Palmer, 64, described him as a "lovely guy" and said it was "incredibly sad".

"You can rebuild buildings, but you can't put lives back together," he added.

"We would love to have another pub there."

Police vans from the scientific services unit parked on a road, which has houses on the left and trees on the right. There is a road closed sign with a police officer standing next to it.Image source, Tony Fisher/BBC
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The cause of Mr Appert's death was given as "traumatic brain injury and severe burns"

Local borough councillor, John Wheeler, said he would also like the site to be rebuilt as a "proper country pub".

He added: "It was a tragedy it should end like this."

The application to demolish the pub and its associated outbuildings is out to consultation, which expires on 17 December.

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