By George Francis Lee
You can read this article on The Lead here
A groan escapes the lips of the locals asked about Accrington Market. “How much time have you got?” one person says. “Accrington Market, where’s that?” jokes another. Everyone has heard the news, everyone has an opinion. Fewer people seem happy.
The noise started in November 2023. Following a Levelling Up fund bid by Hyndburn Borough Council, it was announced that after decades of uninterrupted use, Accrington’s market hall would temporarily close its doors. Why? So the Victorian Grade-II listed building at the centre of town could be renovated into a ‘higher-end eating, drinking and cultural venue’ that would make up a part of a wider ‘Accrington Acre’ and include new green and cultural spaces.
Controversially, this meant that all the stallholders, including some who had worked within the hall for more than 50 years, were forced to pack up and relocate outside. Though the market hall is due to reopen and stallholders return inside in 2025, the outrage was almost immediate online. One commenter declared it was “the final nail in the coffin” for the town.
Sensing public furor and discomfort from stallholders, Hyndburn Borough Council delayed the move from its original date in December by a month and offered three-months waived rent, ultimately allowing a softer transition to the outside in late January.
Still, it did little to quell the simmering anger, which turned to despair following the news that a mainstay of the market – Greg’s Bacon and Cooked Meats Stall – would be closing its shutters forever. At the time, fellow stallholder Reg Whittam wrote: “Hyndburn Borough Council never has, still doesn't and never will listen… It makes me feel sick.”
It’s a story echoed across the country. A once bustling market town – having endured deindustrialisation, demographic shifts and waves of austerity – is forced to try and turn its local economy around through regeneration, whether locals like it or not.
“Consultation with market traders and the public has continued over the past 18 months,” a council spokesperson tells The Hyndburn Lead when questioned on the project’s reception. “There was much positive support for the project.”
But stallholders’ feelings are mixed. Some feel cautiously optimistic about the development, others aren’t convinced. Some are so strongly against the project that they have already moved or closed their businesses for good. But one common observation from stallholders is that the public had the strongest reaction to the news – particularly on social media.
“There was a lot of negativity, mainly from the customers to be honest, when we came outside,” says Jennifer, who has run the Petmart stall with her husband Simon for 25 years. “So I started saying: ‘You know what, I’m happy I’ve still got a job. And I’m happy we’re able to still offer you a service.’
“Then people will say it looks like a refugee camp,” she scoffs. “It’s a knock-on – one person says it, then another.”
That refugee camp comparison refers to the 19 cabins currently outside the market hall which house the stallholders who stuck around after the closure. The cabins are sleek, modern prefabs that wouldn’t look out of place in Manchester. That’s when they’re not flooded with rain water.
“Short periods of severe rain resulted in some water ingress into a small number of cabins,” the council spokesperson says. But one stallholder who, fearing backlash from the council, asks to remain anonymous says it was much worse.