Empty shops

There is a well-established history of artists taking over empty shops for temporary exhibitions or community projects, and in the current economic downturn such activity is being actively supported both by local councils and artist networks.

Popupspace is a new organisation that provides a database of empty properties available on temporary or short-let lease arrangements. There is also an online Forum run by Meanwhile for artists interested in the subject for current or future projects.

If you have already taken over a shop and want to list your event or project, you can join the Artists and Makers Empty Shops Network or add your event information to their blog. Selected press coverage of artists using empty shop spaces can be found in the Projects page in this section.

The Empty Shop Network has also published an excellent guide to artists working with empty shops, freely downloadable on their website.

Popupspace has also launched a Pop Up Insurance, a Retail premises temporary Insurance that can be as short as one month.

To find possible venues you can contact the local council in which you live or work - they tend to prefer a connection to their borough when considering collaborating with an artist - or if you have found a venue, get the owner's contact details via a property search on the Land Registry website (each application for information costs £4).

It can be difficult sometimes to persuade private landlords or local councils to offer temporary leases to artists for cultural activity.  In response to this, the Department for Communities and Local Government (who set policy on local government, housing, urban regeneration, planning and fire and rescue) have published a guide for local town centre managers, councils and landlords setting out the advantages to working with artists and local community associations in temporarily lending or renting their properties to artists.  Highlights of this report and the practical help it offers are below.

Advantages to landlords include:

  • attracting local communities and visitors to an area, where they may use local businesses
  • maintaining town centres and high streets which have faced multiple closures as a result of the recession
  • offsetting empty property business rates as properties used for temporary activities are no longer liable for these rates
  • specimen legal documents available for landlords to speed up and cut costs on the process of lending or letting spaces temporarily

If a private landlord is unwilling to let or lend a space temporarily to artists you could approach your local council and suggest they take on a lease and sublet it to you.  This has the advantage that:

  • the landlord would not be liable for insurance
  • they would have a guarantee from the council to return the property quickly should a permanent tenant appear
  • they would also benefit from having utility and security bills covered
  • there would be no empty property rates to pay

More information that could help to convince a reluctant landlord can be found on the Living Places website.  Living Places is an alliance of public bodies who believe everyone should benefit from the arts, sport, public space, heritage, museums, libraries and archives, the built environment and the creative industries, regardless of where they live.

The Department for Communities and Local Government (DCLG) have also created a fund to help temporary activities take place in empty shop spaces within 57 local councils giving grants of between £1,000 and £10,000, topped up by £500,000 support from Arts Council England.

The DCLG has also published a guide and drafts of so-called 'meanwhile use' leases - special leases that can be used for temporary projects while a more permanent tenant is sought.  These provide standard documents to reduce or eliminate legal costs when negotiating property contracts for temporary use. 

When it was launched, artists could apply to the Art in Empty Spaces fund through ACE's Grants for the Arts Programme. Lambeth Council is keen on advising artists on how to proceed with temporary use of empty shops, and have produce a pdf with advice.

Your local town centre manager can help you to work with landlords and the council, and help to simplify the planning procedures you may require.  Bear in mind that projects taking over a space for less than 28 days do not usually require 'change of use' permission from the council (where a shop space would need to be reclassified for artistic or cultural use, for example).

Local Development Orders allow for 'change of use' that would otherwise require planning permission (a much more lengthy and costly process) and from June 2009 these will be made much more flexible in an amendment to the Planning Act 2008.  This will be in partnership with the Planning Advisory Service.

You may also want to research your local area agreements to see if your proposed project ties in with other local priorities which may help you leverage the funding or permission you require.