Time has virtually stood still in the public bar here, where not a lot has changed since the 60s! This bar was usually staffed, single-handedly by the owner, Sandy Brown. It is with great regret that we announced that Sandy had died, aged 74, on Tuesday 21st April 2020, leaving the future of this popular pub and music venue unknown. However, Sandy's Grandson, Lewis, has taken over the reins and the pub remains open on a regular basis.
The small upstairs lounge is dimly lit and is available for private functions and occasional music performances including on Wednesday evenings, the local folk club.
Next door, the cavernous, converted warehouse is a popular music venue and hosts the Aberdeen Jazz Festival each March and several other jazz Thursdays in the Autumn. There is a blues jam on a Wednesday night and there are usually bands (rock, blues, folk-rock) playing on Friday & Saturday nights at which there may be a charge for admission.
One handpump is now back in the public bar, with one additional beer usually available in the large lounge on handpumps at opposite ends of the bar. Beer is usually from the Cromarty or Orkney Breweries.
Opening times may vary with earlier opening from Friday & Saturday and the big lounge is open till 2am Friday and Saturday nights. Closed normally on Sundays but in winter there is normally a jazz session featuring local bands on the 1st Sunday of the month.
Three star - A pub interior of outstanding national historic importance
Listed status: Not listed
A three-storey granite building, refitted around 1960 and hardly changed since - it's very rare to find virtually intact interiors from that period.
The ground floor comprises a U-shaped room with floor to ceiling ply panelling. The counter has a panelled front and black Formica top while the gantry has a mirrored back and glass shelves. Also dating from the refit are the doors and the leatherette fixed seating in the left-hand part. The lounge is on the first floor and sports more ply panelling and a similar servery and fixed seating. In 1989, the former soap factory next door was converted to a music lounge and new ground floor toilets were installed (the lounge loos are from the 1960s). Real ale is served from a fount - a rarity these days.
The Blue Lamp has a rare virtually intact interior from c.1960 featuring distinct fittings of the time on two floors. A three storey granite building in the same family since 1949 it was refitted in c.1960 and is virtual unchanged since with rooms on two floors. In 1989 the former soap factory built in 1850 to the right was converted into a music (lounge) bar. This led to the only loss of the 1960s fittings when new toilets were installed on the ground floor. Front door leads into a small carpeted lobby and on the right is a staircase to the first floor lounge. The interior door ahead is one of many in a very 1960s style with a couple of vertical glass panels and leads to the U-shaped public bar.
The servery is in the right part of the U with a lino floor and has a ply panelled bar front with a black Formica top that extends over the top part of the front. The gantry consists of glass shelves on a mirror back. The left and rear walls have floor to ceiling ply panelling and only some bar stools here, no tables so mainly stand-up drinking. On the left as you enter the public bar there are two door-width gaps with a ply covered square pillar between them leading to the carpeted floor seating area in this part of the U shaped room. Around most of the room the walls have floor to ceiling ply panelling. Typical 1960s red padded leatherette fixed seating runs all around the room. At the front left is a dart area (?) and on the bench end here are vertical wooden slats reaching to the ceiling.
The lounge is on the first floor and has more 1960s doors and a carpeted floor. On the far wall the wall is covered in panelling laid horizontally. The servery is in the rear left area which has floor to ceiling wooden struts as a wall on the right hand side, Another very 1960s feature is the false ceiling over the servery which is of strips of wood laid vertically and horizontally with a mesh within the squares. There is a bar counter with a plain ply frontage and cream Formica top; the gantry is of glass shelves on a mirror backing, the main shelf is of Formica, and lower shelving is almost intact with only one fridge. Around the room is blue leatherette padded fixed seating – very 1960s. The gents’ and ladies on this floor are unchanged. The lounge is available for private functions and occasional music performances.
There is a separate entrance to the popular music venue on the right which hosts the Aberdeen Jazz Festival each March. Through a revolving door is a large room with modern but good quality fittings including a three bay bar back and modern dado panelling, also a stage. The local folk club meet here on a Wednesday night, jazz on some Thursdays, and there are usually bands (rock, blues, folk-rock) playing on Friday & Saturday nights at which there may be a charge for admission. This is one of few pubs still selling (one) real ale from a fount. Opens at 4pm (2pm Sun) - opens at 12 if Aberdeen are playing at home. The music lounge hosts Jazz on Thu, music most Fridays, and comedy on Sat.
This Pub serves 2 changing beers and 0 regular beers.
Blue Lamp, Aberdeen
Introduction This guide describes the 116 pubs identified by CAMRA as having interiors of national or regional historic or architectural importance, plus a further 24 whose interiors are of some regional interest. Scotland has over 4000 pubs so why do...