Joiners Arms: community meetings announced as plans for new LGBTQI+ pub/hub take shape

Joiners Arms will live on as an LGBTQI+ pub. Photograph: Wikimedia Commons

Resurrected: The Joiners Arms will live on as an LGBTQI+ pub. Photograph: Wikimedia Commons

In its heyday, the now-closed Joiners Arms on Hackney Road acted as faithful pub, singalong late-night party hub, and a general base for the LGBTQI+ populace in East London.

It is this diverse community that is to be consulted on the future of the derelict space, as two public meetings were announced this week by campaign group Friends of the Joiners Arms (FOTJA).

Both meetings will be held at Amhurst Terrace venue Hackney Showroom, one from 3pm to 5pm on Saturday 10 March, and a weeknight one on Wednesday 14 March from 7pm to 9pm. Attendees will be encouraged to let the ideas flow, with the help of breakout sessions, workshops and guest speakers.

Tickets are free, and available online at www.bitly.com/FOTJA.

These events follow last October’s news that the building, previously earmarked for demolition until a planning application for office space and luxury flats was rejected by Tower Hamlets Council, will instead be leased out for at least 25 years to facilitate a like-for-like replacement.

Although the ruling also advised that this new Joiners can operate with the same extended opening hours the old one was known for (doors were open until 4am on weekends), FOTJA have more extensive goals, saying in a statement that they “believe there’s no reason a venue can’t throw banging parties whilst also engaging in grassroots politics.”

Friends of the Joiners Arms campaigners. Photograph: FOTJA

Friends of the Joiners Arms campaigners. Photograph: FOTJA

Group member Jon Ward expanded on that sentiment to the Citizen:

“FOTJA is a testament to the power we have as queers unified against a common enemy: in a fight reminiscent of David vs. Goliath, the developers expected that they would be able to demolish the Joiners Arms and redevelop the site with one solitary goal – profit.

“That these plans did not succeed and that Tower Hamlets supported our protests in such groundbreaking fashion demonstrates our collective strength in fighting gentrification.

“Now is the time to build on this success and rethink what we want out of queer spaces: with particular attention paid to elevating those voices and needs which are usually marginalized, even within our own LGBTQI+ community.”

Help to achieve this will be provided not only by the £130,000 towards fit-out costs of the venue – committed after the FOTJA campaign by the developers who own the site – but also by a new Department for Communities and Local Government-backed scheme called ‘More Than A Pub’.

This £3.62 million programme aims to support community ownership of pubs in England, and is also aided by independent trust Power To Change, the Campaign for Real Ale (CAMRA) and more.

According to research by UCL’s Urban Lab, the number of LGBTQI+ venues in London has fallen by 58% since 2006.

FOTJA campaigner Amy Roberts looked ahead to the work yet to be done, at the Showroom meetings and beyond:

“As excited as we were to have won planning protections…this victory only marked a successful end of ‘phase I’ – not the end of our journey.

“The doors of our beloved Joiners remain as closed as they first were in January 2015, and we are still without a vital queer space. Now we enter ‘phase II’: creating a radical organisation and working towards opening the doors of London’s first community-run LGBTQI+ bar.

“That first pint is going to be a good one.”