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Tuesday 11 November 2025 15:11

Rome’s bars and Britain’s vanishing pubs

When the Bar Becomes the Last Public Space.“The pub was the heart of our village. Now it’s luxury flats, and nobody pops round to their neighbours for a few tea bags and some sugar.”This lament from a resident of a small British isle captures a quiet crisis unfolding across the UK, one that Romans may struggle to imagine, but perhaps should heed as a cautionary tale. In 2024 alone, nearly 300 pubs closed permanently across England and Wales. That’s six a week, and over 4,500 jobs gone. Since 2000, a quarter of Britain’s pubs have vanished. These aren’t just statistics; they represent the dismantling of a civic infrastructure. The erosion of “third spaces”, neither home nor work, is a phenomenon every community should worry about in an increasingly digital world. Meanwhile, in Rome, the institutional bar endures. Italian bars have always been multifunctional, and their cultural weight is something worth protecting. These establishments are more than commercial ventures: they are civic institutions that sustain the rhythms of daily life. The contrast with the UK is striking. British pubs have traditionally been evening destinations for drinking and socialising, while Roman bars are woven into the entire day. You might visit the same bar three times, morning espresso, lunchtime panino, evening aperitivo. In Italy, alcohol was never the sole purpose, and that difference matters enormously as cultural habits evolve. Younger generations are drinking less. In the UK, alcohol consumption among 16- to 24-year-olds has fallen from 67% in 2002 to 37% in 2021. Gen Z drinks around 20% less than millennials did at the same age, due to health consciousness, wellness trends, and the rising cost of living. For British pubs already struggling under business rates, energy bills, and labour costs, this shift feels existential. Recent budget measures added £650 million in new costs, and for every £3 spent in a pub, £1 goes to tax. The maths is brutal when your customers drink less and your bills keep climbing. Italian bars, by contrast, survive because their espresso drinkers and aperitivo-goers keep them relevant from dawn to dusk. Their diversity isn’t just good business, it’s what keeps them anchored in community life. The stakes in Britain go far beyond economics. Research by Robin Dunbar shows that people with a “local” have more close friends, greater life satisfaction, and stronger community ties. Romans instinctively understand this. Pub closures are a warning: social culture must be actively protected. Rome’s bars will likely endure because they are embedded in daily rituals that transcend alcohol, but the British once thought the same of their pubs. The replacement of a public house with a block of flats is not merely architectural; it signals the slow erosion of communal life. Neighbourhood bars, in Rome or Rochdale, do not preserve themselves. They require participation, presence, and recognition of their civic value. One closure at a time, Britain is learning that pubs don’t just serve drinks, they serve society. And once gone, that kind of community doesn’t reopen easily. Ph: Sandor Szmutko / Shutterstock.com

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“The pub was the heart of our village. Now it’s luxury flats, and nobody pops round to their neighbours for a few tea bags and some sugar.” This lament from a resident of a small British isle captures a quiet crisis unfolding across the UK, one that Romans may struggle to imagine, but perhaps should heed as a cautionary tale. In 2024 alone, nearly 300 pubs closed permanently across England and Wales. That’s six a week, and over 4,500 jobs gone. Since 2000, a quarter of Britain’s pubs have vanished. These aren’t just statistics; they represent the dismantling of a civic infrastructure. The erosion of “third spaces”, neither home nor work, is a phenomenon every community should worry about in an increasingly digital world. Meanwhile, in Rome, the institutional bar endures. Italian bars have always been multifunctional, and their cultural weight is something worth protecting. These establishments are more than commercial ventures: they are civic institutions that sustain the rhythms of daily life. The contrast with the UK is striking. British pubs have traditionally been evening destinations for drinking and socialising, while Roman bars are woven into the entire day. You might visit the same bar three times, morning espresso, lunchtime panino, evening aperitivo. In Italy, alcohol was never the sole purpose, and that difference matters enormously as cultural habits evolve. Younger generations are drinking less. In the UK, alcohol consumption among 16- to 24-year-olds has fallen from 67% in 2002 to 37% in 2021. Gen Z drinks around 20% less than millennials did at the same age, due to health consciousness, wellness trends, and the rising cost of living. For British pubs already struggling under business rates, energy bills, and labour costs, this shift feels existential. Recent budget measures added £650 million in new costs, and for every £3 spent in a pub, £1 goes to tax. The maths is brutal when your customers drink less and your bills keep climbing. Italian bars, by contrast, survive because their espresso drinkers and aperitivo-goers keep them relevant from dawn to dusk. Their diversity isn’t just good business, it’s what keeps them anchored in community life. The stakes in Britain go far beyond economics. Research by Robin Dunbar shows that people with a “local” have more close friends, greater life satisfaction, and stronger community ties. Romans instinctively understand this. Pub closures are a warning: social culture must be actively protected. Rome’s bars will likely endure because they are embedded in daily rituals that transcend alcohol, but the British once thought the same of their pubs. The replacement of a public house with a block of flats is not merely architectural; it signals the slow erosion of communal life. Neighbourhood bars, in Rome or Rochdale, do not preserve themselves. They require participation, presence, and recognition of their civic value. One closure at a time, Britain is learning that pubs don’t just serve drinks, they serve society. And once gone, that kind of community doesn’t reopen easily. Ph: Sandor Szmutko / Shutterstock.com
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