North Yorkshire Council has said there has been interest from operators of nightclubs, bars and restaurants in taking on Harrogate’s former Viper Rooms building.
However, the building still remains empty more than seven months after the nightclub abruptly shut.
The council owns the Royal Baths building which was home to the Viper Rooms from 2007 until December 2022 when it closed after failing to negotiate a new lease.
The council changed the locks and about 30 staff lost their jobs just a couple of weeks before Christmas.
Viper Rooms was owned by businessman Paul Kinsey who also ran the former clubs Moko Lounge and Kings Club in the town. Its closure left Harrogate without a nightclub.
The council has instructed property agent Savills to market the property and it’s asking for a rent of £150,000 a year — but there have been no takers so far.
North Yorkshire Council’s corporate director of resources, Gary Fielding, said there has been interest from national, regional and local operators looking at using for the premises as a potential nightclub, bar or restaurant.
Mr Fielding added:
“We hope the building will be occupied as soon as possible, but will ensure it is the right use, with a sustainable operator for the space. It is still early days in terms of marketing and discussions, and we would not identify interested parties at this stage.
“We are marketing the premises with an open approach to the rent to secure the right operator.”
Read more:
- Harrogate nightclub Viper Rooms closes suddenly
- New tenants soon for Harrogate’s Viper Rooms and nearby bar?
- Viper Rooms owner says Harrogate landlords need to ‘get real’ with rent
Harrogate bar bids to stay open until 6.30am
A Harrogate bar has applied to extend its operating hours until 6.30am on Fridays and Saturdays.
Best Bar opened a year ago next to Santorini Express on Parliament Street and already describes itself as a bar and night club.
It is a wine and cocktail bar in the evenings and on Fridays and Saturdays also offers music and DJs from 9.30pm.
In March last year, it successfully applied to Harrogate Borough Council to extend its operating hours from 11.30pm to 4am.
It has now applied to the council to further extend the hours on Fridays and Saturdays until 6.30am.
A spokesman at Best Bars told the Stray Ferret the recent demise of nearby Viper Rooms meant it was the “only bar in Harrogate with proper nightclub music and DJs” and many people did not want to go home at 4am.
He said the club had already successfully trialled some temporary extensions until 6.30am and they proved successful because people were able to party longer and there were fewer problems caused by everyone having to leave at a time when many weren’t ready to do so. He added:
“It made a huge difference and was a great success all round.”
Last month Mojo in Harrogate applied to extend its opening hours until 6.30am as the Harrogate late night scene continues to evolve following the closure of Viper Rooms.
Read more:
- Harrogate Mojo applies to extend opening hours until 6.30am
- Harrogate nightclub Viper Rooms closes suddenly
No.12: End of an era as Harrogate’s last nightclub closes
In the last article of our series on the 12 stories in the Harrogate district that shaped 2022, we look back at the story of the closure of Harrogate’s last night club – the Viper Rooms.
For generations of young people growing up in Harrogate, nightclubs have been an essential part of weekend life.
The likes of Carringtons, Jimmy’s and Josephines are still talked about fondly by people of a certain age. So it’s hard to believe not a single nightclub remains.
The last one, Viper Rooms, closed on December 9 — and the end was swift and brutal.
North Yorkshire County Council, which owns the site on Parliament Street, sent in bailiffs to repossess the building and change the locks just hours before the club was due to welcome Friday night revellers.

Repossession notices on door.
Viper Rooms, owned by Paul Kinsey, did not hold back in a social media post announcing the club’s demise after 15 years. It said:
“Having tried for nearly three years to negotiate a new lease with our landlord in good faith and after spending £350,000 refurbishing the club in 2019 they have taken possession of the site, hijacking the process and causing 30 team members to be laid off and causing the cancellation of all the pre-booked Christmas parties.”

Paul Kinsey
Gary Fielding, corporate director for strategic resources at the council, responded by saying it was “protecting the best interests of North Yorkshire’s taxpayers”.
Mr Fielding added:
“We have tried hard to understand the difficulties all our tenants have experienced as a result of the covid pandemic and to offer them our support. This has, in turn, had an impact on our own finances.
“Residents and businesses here rightly expect us to ensure that every effort is made to protect public money and we have a duty to do just that.
“While we do not want to comment on individual cases, we must be fair and consistent and act in the best interests of the public who we serve.”

Viper Rooms is no more.
The closure of the Viper Rooms means two of the four commercial units in the Royal Baths, which North Yorkshire County Council bought off Harrogate Borough Council for £9 million in 2018, are now empty.
The JD Wetherspoon pub and the Royal Baths Chinese Restaurant continue to trade. Mr Fielding said the Viper Rooms site had already generated “significant interest from potential tenants” and a “new agreement for the final one is in the final stages of negotiations”.
So what about Harrogate’s nightclub scene? In its social media post announcing Viper Rooms’ closure, the owners said they would release a “new venue announcement soon”.
But with so many pubs and bars staying open late these says, nightclubs no longer mean as much to many young people.
Have they become an inevitable victim of social trends, or is Harrogate’s nightclub scene set for a revival? The next year should provide some answers.
Read more:
- ‘Significant interest’ in Harrogate’s former Viper Rooms, says council
- Viper Rooms: council issues statement after repossessing Harrogate nightclub
- Harrogate nightclub Viper Rooms closes suddenly
Viper Rooms: council issues statement after repossessing Harrogate nightclub
North Yorkshire County Council has said it acted in the “best interests” of taxpayers after it repossessed Harrogate’s Viper Rooms.
Bailiffs acting on behalf of the council entered the Parliament Street nightclub on Friday and changed the locks.
Notices pinned to the doors said any attempt to re-enter the premises would result in criminal or civil proceedings.
It prompted the club to announce on social media, hours before it was due to open, that it had closed with the loss of 30 jobs.
The venue, which was Harrogate’s last remaining nightclub, is part of the Royal Baths commercial investment portfolio acquired by the council for £9 million in 2018.

The club is part of the Royal Baths.
Gary Fielding, corporate director for strategic resources at the council, said in a statement to the Stray Ferret:
“We are unable to discuss details about specific cases that North Yorkshire County Council is involved in.
“However, we will pursue our policies that protect the best interests of North Yorkshire’s taxpayers, and will therefore act accordingly.”
Read more:
- Harrogate nightclub Viper Rooms closes suddenly
- Questions raised as Harrogate Royal Baths loses £2.5m in value
- Council accused of ‘trophy investment’ for £9m purchase of Harrogate’s Royal Baths
The council has been under pressure to generate better returns on the Baths.
It was described as an “underperforming trophy asset” by one councillor last year because of its low rate of investment returns.
Last month the council warned it would take a tougher line on tenants following further poor investment returns.
Mr Fielding said the council “has done all it reasonably can to support its tenants” through covid, adding:
“We work with our tenants to understand their circumstances in order to maximise the income into the council.
“However, it is not the council’s responsibility to support tenants indefinitely, and if businesses are not sustainable then we work with tenants to bring tenancies to a close.”
Woman who headbutted Harrogate nightclub manager spared jail
A woman who headbutted a nightclub manager, busting her nose open, has been spared jail.
Jodie Milburn, 19, butted the victim with such force that blood “soaked” the wall outside the Viper Rooms in Harrogate town centre, prosecutor Eleanor Durdy told York Crown Court.
CCTV captured the moment Milburn repeatedly slapped the named woman, who was assistant manager at the popular nightclub, situated in the Grade II-listed Royal Baths building in Parliament Street.
With her arms restrained, Milburn, of Mayfield Grove, Harrogate, then head-butted the victim who was bleeding profusely.
Ms Durdy described the drunken attack, on August 15 last year, as “prolonged and persistent”.
A witness said there was “lots of blood, so much so that the blue wall was soaked in it”.
The victim’s clothes were also covered in blood and she was said to be “stunned”.
Read more:
- Chef jailed after shooting teenage employee in the eye at Harrogate pub
- Teen arrested after 500 cannabis plants seized in Harrogate house
Milburn set upon the manager after what she claimed was an incident inside the club involving a man and one of her family members, but this “wasn’t supported by the evidence”, the court heard.
It was initially suspected that the victim’s nose was broken but this didn’t prove to be the case.
Milburn was arrested and charged with assault occasioning actual bodily harm but denied the offence.
A jury found her guilty following a trial earlier this month.
She appeared for sentence yesterday when her barrister Andrew Stranex said that an immediate jail sentence would scupper her hopes of working abroad.
He said she had a troubled upbringing but had done well at college, had good references from her employer and had a new job lined up overseas.
‘Disgraceful piece of behaviour’
Judge Simon Hickey described the attack as a “disgraceful piece of behaviour”.
He told Milburn:
“What you did…was throw your head back when (the victim) was simply doing her public duty…and head-butted her on her nose.
“She reeled backwards and blood poured out of her nose and onto her clothing. A witness said (the victim) was stunned and remained stunned for quite some time. It was a nasty injury (and) you were clearly in drink.”
However, Mr Hickey said the incident was “clearly out of character” and Milburn had “strong personal mitigation” including good character reports.
The judge said that for those reasons, he would not be locking her up and preventing her taking up her new job abroad.
Instead, Milburn was given a nine-month suspended prison sentence and ordered to pay the victim £1,000 compensation “for the hurt and the pain” caused to her.
New bar and nightclub to open on Harrogate’s Parliament StreetA new bar and nightclub is set to become the latest addition to the nightlife scene on Harrogate’s Parliament Street.
Best Bar will open as a bar and cafe during the day and then a wine, gin and cocktail bar in the evenings. On Fridays and Saturdays it is will also open as a nightclub.
Best Bar is currently advertising for bar staff, with banners in the shop window advertising it will be “opening soon”.
The bar, next to Santorini Express, isn’t the only new bar due to open on Parliament Street. Leeds-based cocktail bar Roland’s is opening a new venue in the former Moss Bros clothes shop.
Best Bar has been approved for an alcohol licence to sell until 2am Sunday to Wednesday and 4am Thursday to Saturday.
Read more:
Parliament Street already hosts numerous bars including Revolución de Cuba, Mojo, Wetherspoons and the Viper Rooms.
The Ginnel also hosts several bars, including Montey’s and Major Tom’s Social.
Viper Rooms bids to extend weekend opening hours until 6.30amThe Viper Rooms nightclub on Parliament Street has applied to Harrogate Borough Council to extend its opening hours on Friday and Saturday nights until 6.30am.
Harrogate’s only nightclub reopened in July after being closed due to covid restrictions since March last year, except for one night on Halloween last year.
It currently serves alcohol until 4am and closes at 4.30am. The application seeks to extend both by two hours.
Owner Paul Kinsey told the Stray Ferret the nightclub is still busy at 4am, so closing later would stop revellers leaving the club all at once. He added there was also a demand from customers to stay out later.
Read More:
-
Former Victorian hotel in Harrogate to become modern co-working space
-
Collinsons brothers win ‘Golden Teddies’ for toy industry work
Mr Kinsey said:
“Since reopening we have monitored customer trends closely and we have seen that we are still very busy at 4am.
“Therefore to have a more orderly dispersal of customers and not move several hundred people onto the streets at one time. It’s more sensible to trade later and allow a staggered dispersal of customers as well as catering for customer demand for a later finish to their night.
“We have trialled the later closing hours in recent weeks and it has gone without any issues at all.
“It’s not our intention to trade every night until 6am. it’s just having the permission to do so if needed.”