Georgian restaurant blames rates rise for closure
BBCA man who "spent a small fortune" on opening a restaurant in a Georgian building says rising costs have forced him to close.
Andrew Leonard said the Mansion House, in Louth, Lincolnshire, had been "very popular" and regularly booked up.
But an impending £3,500 rise in rateable value on top of staffing costs, National Insurance payments and energy bills, had been the "final straw", he added.
The government said it was reforming business rates to back hospitality venues, with a £4.3bn support package to limit increases to bills, and a 5p cut to the business rates tax rate for high street firms.
Leonard said: "Unless the government wakes up and smells the coffee, there's trouble ahead.
"Rents are crazy, rates are crazy. We're living in a ridiculous world."
Andrew LeonardThe Mansion House, on Upgate, Louth, was built in about 1750 and is a Grade II* listed property.
Leonard described the restoration, which began in 2017, as a "major project" which had been done to "a very high standard".
"Everything in life is a gamble. I always knew this day may come," he said.
"I didn't think I'd necessarily get a return on my investment, I just walked in through the front door and fell in love with it."

Katrina Pierce, of the Lincolnshire Federation of Small Businesses, said firms were facing an "April cost crunch".
"Businesses are not asking for a handout," she added. "What they're asking for is a bit of headroom from the weight of the pressures.
"Some of those are cost pressures, some are around regulation, some are legislation, some are taxation.
"They just need a bit of breathing room."
A spokesperson for HM Treasury, which sets business rates, said: "We have the right economic plan – we're reforming business rates to back hospitality, with a £4.3bn support package to limit bills rises, alongside capping corporation tax at 25%, cutting red tape and taking action on the cost of living to boost the sector.
"We're also cutting the business rates tax rate by 5p for high street businesses, funded by higher bills for the top 1% most expensive properties – meaning many big online warehouses now pay a 33% higher rate than small high street premises."
Listen to highlights fromLincolnshire on BBC Sounds, watch thelatest episode of Look North.
Download the BBC News app from the App Storefor iPhone and iPad orGoogle Play for Android devices
