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#thesandpiper — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #thesandpiper, aggregated by home.social.

  1. LLANELLI: ‘A bombshell for all concerned’ — community rallies to save the Sandpiper as calls grow for Whitbread to think again

    Calls are growing to save the Sandpiper Brewers Fayre in Llanelli after Whitbread confirmed it is among nearly 200 restaurants facing closure – with the local MP, ward councillors and hundreds of customers all urging the company to reconsider.

    The Sandpiper sits at the Sandy Water Park end of Sandy Road, on the roundabout junction with the Millennium Coastal Path – making it one of the most scenically positioned restaurants in the area. It has become a firm favourite with local families, dog walkers and visitors, particularly well known for its beer garden overlooking the lake, its outdoor play area and its soft play facilities.

    Swansea Bay News revealed on Thursday 30 April that the Sandpiper was among four local restaurants facing closure as part of Whitbread’s plan to exit the restaurant sector entirely and focus on its Premier Inn hotel brand. Staff were informed of the decision on Thursday, with one regular customer reporting that the restaurant was still full that evening – and that staff carried on serving customers professionally despite the shock news. The Sandpiper is understood to be due to close by the end of August.

    The Sandpiper Brewers Fayre on Sandy Road in Llanelli, one of four local restaurants facing closure following Whitbread’s announcement.

    Llanelli MP Dame Nia Griffith said the announcement was devastating for staff and visitors alike. “This is such a special location with the lake and the Millennium Coastal Park, and is much enjoyed by locals and visitors, very young and not so young alike,” she said. “I will be doing everything I can to keep a pub open here.”

    Councillors Martyn Palfreman and Edward Skinner, who represent the Hengoed ward covering Sandy Water Park, described the closure as a blow the town could ill afford. “Llanelli can ill-afford another blow to its hospitality sector and this announcement will come as a huge disappointment to all those who value everything the Sandpiper has to offer,” said Cllr Skinner. “We call upon Whitbread to think again.”

    Cllr Palfreman described the news as a shock. “This news is a bombshell for all concerned, including staff and the vast numbers of customers that visit the Sandpiper throughout the year, both those living locally and people visiting Llanelli,” he said. “To take away such a cherished amenity would be a huge loss to the town and surrounding area.”

    The reaction from customers on social media has been overwhelming. Readers described the Sandpiper as always busy and impossible to understand as a closure candidate – with many saying they hoped a buyer would come forward to keep it open. Several highlighted the venue’s importance for families with young children, noting it was one of the few local options with outdoor play facilities and a safe lakeside setting. Long-standing members of staff, described by many as professional and welcoming, were a particular source of concern. One customer noted they had been turned away on Saturday afternoon due to a staff meeting taking place – unaware at the time that staff were being told about the closure.

    There is some hope that the site could survive under new ownership. Whitbread has indicated that around 110 of the nearly 200 restaurants being closed will be sold as going concerns rather than converted to additional hotel rooms. However, the Sandpiper sits alongside a Premier Inn hotel – and the fate of a similar adjoining restaurant at Parc Pemberton in Llanelli serves as a cautionary note. The former Beefeater there, which also adjoined a Premier Inn, was demolished to make way for additional hotel bedrooms rather than being sold on as a food and drink venue.

    Whitbread announced on Thursday 30 April that it planned to become a “pure-play hotel business,” closing all of its remaining Beefeater and Brewers Fayre branded restaurants. The company said the proposed changes remained subject to employee consultation, and that it hoped to retain a significant proportion of those affected through redeployment across its 15,000 annual vacancies.

    Baglan councillors have also written to Whitbread CEO Dominic Paul demanding answers over the planned closure of the Bagle Brook Beefeater in Port Talbot. Whitbread has not yet responded publicly to any of the calls for a rethink.

    Our Whitbread coverage

    Four local restaurants face closure as Whitbread axes up to 3,800 jobs across UK estate
    Our original report on the four local closures including the Sandpiper.

    Baglan councillors demand answers from Whitbread CEO over Bagle Brook closure
    How Baglan’s councillors are fighting back against the closure of the Bagle Brook Beefeater.

    #BrewersFayre #CllrEdwardSkinner #DameNiaGriffithMP #Llanelli #MartynPalfreman #restaurantClosure #SandyWaterPark #TheSandpiper #Whitbread
  2. Four local restaurants face closure as Whitbread axes up to 3,800 jobs across UK estate

    Four restaurants across the Swansea Bay area are among nearly 200 set to close after Premier Inn owner Whitbread announced plans to cut up to 3,800 jobs as part of a sweeping five-year overhaul of its business.

    The Swansea Vale Brewers Fayre on Upper Fforest Way in Llansamlet, the Waterfront Beefeater on Langdon Road in Swansea’s SA1 maritime quarter, the Bagle Brook Beefeater on Pentwyn Baglan Road in Baglan, and The Sandpiper Brewers Fayre on Sandy Road in Llanelli are all included in the list of sites affected by the restructuring.

    Whitbread confirmed the proposed changes on 30 April as part of a new five-year plan that will see it exit its remaining branded restaurant estate entirely and replace all 197 sites with a more efficient food and beverage model linked more closely to its Premier Inn hotels. Around 110 branded restaurant sites are expected to be sold as going concerns over the next 24 months, while the remainder will be converted or closed.

    The company said the proposed reduction to its 30,000-strong workforce remains subject to employee consultation, and that it anticipates retaining a considerable proportion of those affected through redeployment. The firm’s previous restructuring programme in 2024 resulted in around 1,500 redundancies.

    Chief executive Dominic Paul said the plan would transform the business. “We always challenge ourselves to improve and, in light of significant cost increases in the form of business rates and national insurance, as well as the implied market discount to our inherent value, we’ve looked hard at the options open to us to maximise value creation over the medium and long-term,” he said. “This plan will transform Whitbread into a higher-margin, higher-returning pure-play hotel business.”

    Unite, the union representing workers across the business, said it would seek urgent discussions with Whitbread and provide support to affected members – after claiming staff first learned of the redundancies through media reports rather than from their employer. Unite general secretary Sharon Graham described the cuts as “cruel” and called on the company to enter formal consultations immediately.

    Unite national officer Colenzo Jarret-Thorpe added: “It is disgraceful that Whitbread employees heard about the job cuts through the media. The company did not even have the decency to let its staff know first.”

    As part of the restructuring, Whitbread plans to sell 1.5 billion pounds of freehold property to fund future growth, reducing its freehold ownership to between 30% and 40% – making it a majority leaseholder for the first time since the Premier Inn chain was founded in 1987. The company is targeting 2 billion pounds of free cash flow by its 2031 financial year, and intends to increase its total hotel room count to 96,000 by that date, up from approximately 86,600 currently.

    The announcement follows Whitbread’s pre-tax profit of 298 million pounds for the year ending February 2026, representing a 19% decline on the previous year. Overall revenues remained unchanged year-on-year at 2.9 billion pounds, though UK sales climbed by 1%.

    The closure of The Sandpiper is the latest blow to Llanelli’s hospitality sector, which has suffered a string of losses in recent months. The Bryngwyn and Ali Raj restaurants closed on the same day in January, prompting hundreds of tributes from customers sharing decades of memories. The Tinhouse taproom followed in February, and the four-star Stradey Park Hotel closed with immediate effect in March, leaving staff without jobs and couples fearing for their wedding deposits.

    Whitbread itself has already been reducing its footprint in the area. The Pemberton Beefeater in Llanelli – which sat next to the Premier Inn at Parc Pemberton Retail Park, close to Parc y Scarlets stadium – closed in July 2024, with plans to demolish the site and revamp the wider development. The Sandpiper Brewers Fayre on Sandy Road, also in Llanelli, is now set to follow.

    The closures come as rising business rates and national insurance costs continue to squeeze the hospitality sector across Wales. Welsh Government introduced 15% business rates relief for hospitality businesses in 2026, but CAMRA – the Campaign for Real Ale – has warned the measure still leaves Welsh venues at a significant disadvantage compared with England, where the relief stands at 75%.

    Related stories from Swansea Bay News

    Two much-loved Llanelli restaurants close on the same day as customers share heartbreak
    The Bryngwyn and Ali Raj both closed in January 2026 amid mounting hospitality pressures.

    Much-loved Llanelli taproom The Tinhouse to close as hospitality pressures mount
    The popular town centre taproom closed in February 2026.

    Llanelli rallies around as businesses offer lifeline to Stradey Park Hotel staff and customers
    The four-star hotel closed with immediate effect in March 2026.

    SWANSEA: Flagship M&S store confirms May 30 closure date as council leader hints at Debenhams news
    Another major closure hitting the Swansea area this week.

    More business news from Swansea Bay News
    The latest business and employment stories from across the Swansea Bay region.

    #Baglan #BagleBrook #Beefeater #BrewersFayre #featured #foodDrink #Llanelli #Llansamlet #PremierInn #restaurantClosure #Swansea #TheSandpiper #Whitbread
  3. "The Shadow of Your Smile", also known as "Love Theme from #TheSandpiper", is a #popular song. The music was written by #JohnnyMandel with the lyrics written by #PaulFrancisWebster. The song was introduced in the #1965Film The Sandpiper, with a trumpet solo by #JackSheldon and later became a minor hit for #TonyBennett (Johnny Mandel arranged and conducted his version as well). It won the #GrammyAwardForSongOfTheYear and the #AcademyAwardForBestOriginalSong. In 2004.
    youtube.com/watch?v=SOkoP219W9c