A Killinghall resident is looking to investigate what can be done to re-open the only remaining pub in the heart of the village.
The Greyhounds Inn, a Samuel Smith‘s pub at the junction of Ripon Road and Otley Road, has been closed for several years.
Its loss has been particularly keenly felt since the Three Horseshoes opposite was razed to the ground last year to make way for a new Tesco Express store, which is due to open next year.
It means the rapidly expanding village has gone from having two pubs in its centre to none.
Jonny Smith, who moved to Killinghall five years ago, recently floated the idea on social media of villagers getting together to see what could be done to re-open The Greyhounds.
Mr Smith said:
“I’m trying to understand where we stand, and whether as a collective we can do anything.
“It’s a nice old building with so much potential. It has a lovely old pub feel to it and just needs some TLC. Killinghall has more homes and families than ever so it could do well.”
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Sam Smith’s occasionally posts adverts looking for people to run the pub but it has been closed for about five years. Mr Smith said:
“I know others in the village want to see it re-open. I’m hoping somebody might have an idea on where we go from here but I don’t have a massive amount of hope.”
The Stray Ferret attempted to contact Samuel Smith’s but has not yet received a reply.
Tesco has begun advertising for 15 staff to work at the Express store that is being built on the site of the former Three Horseshoes pub.
The advert initially said the positions were for a Jack’s store, which is Tesco’s budget brand, but a spokesman for the company told the Stray Ferret this was an error and it would be an Express.
The Tesco spokesman also said a planning application for the proposed new full size Tesco store in Harrogate, about a mile from the site of the Killinghall Express, was “imminent”.
New Tesco could open in Killinghall next year
The new Tesco Express in Killinghall is unlikely to open until late next year at the earliest.
The store is due to be built on the site of The Three Horseshoes pub on the main Ripon Road in the middle of Killinghall.
The pub posted a message on its Facebook page on Saturday saying it will close on September 27. But it could be some time before the Tesco Express opens.
In July, Harrogate Borough Council approved plans by Ilkley developers Dynamic Capital Killinghall to convert the site to a convenience store.
The plans also involve constructing four flats and installing six electric vehicle charging points.
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At a meeting of Killinghall Parish Council last week, Cllr John Moretta said the developers had suggested once work gets underway it is likely to take a year to complete.
Last month Tesco applied for an alcohol licence from 6am to 11pm seven days of the week at the site, which has hosted a pub for 150 years.
Tesco subsequently submitted three more planning applications for signage, lighting and an ATM machine. Work is unlikely to begin until these matters are resolved.
Fellow parish councillor George Novelli told last week’s meeting the store would be “absolutely vital for the village”, which has grown considerably in recent years. A Tesco spokesman said:
“We believe the new store will be a positive addition to the local community and we aim to be serving customers there in 2021.”
The Greyhounds Inn opposite The Three Horseshoes remains closed.
Historic Killinghall pub reopensOne of the oldest pubs in the Harrogate district reopened on Friday – just weeks after planners granted permission to convert the site into a convenience store.
Locals in Killinghall wondered whether last orders had been called for the final time at The Three Horseshoes when it closed for lockdown.
Ilkley company Dynamic Capital Killinghall had submitted plans to Harrogate Borough Council to demolish the building and construct a convenience store and four flats.
When the plans were approved this month, it appeared to herald a new chapter for the site, which has hosted a pub for 150 years.
But the pub reopened at the weekend and the developers have yet to confirm when the conversion will take place.
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Will Rogers, a planner at Planning Potential, which is the agent acting on behalf of Dynamic Capital Killinghall, told The Stray Ferret “the applicant remains committed to the site”.
But he was unable to confirm when work will begin, adding:
“We have a series of planning conditions we need to discharge first and then we’ll know more on timescales.”
One of the council’s conditions was to install six electric vehicle charging points.
Rogers said the convenience store, which will be in the middle of Killinghall on the busy Ripon Road, would open seven days a week from 7am to 11pm and was expected to create 15 part-time and full-time jobs.

How the convenience store will look.
Forty-one individual representations supported the proposal and six opposed it. The council also received a petition signed by 232 people objecting to the loss of the pub.
Councillors decided “the proposal would provide substantial social and environmental benefits” and approved it.
The public body Historic England rejected a proposal this year to grant the pub listed building status.
Punch Taverns, which owns the pub, did not reply to The Stray Ferret’s request for a comment.