Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

G1 Group

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Type
  
Public limited company

Founder
  
Stefan King

Parent organization
  
G1 Group (Holdings) Plc

Website
  
www.g1group.co.uk

Founded
  
1990

G1 Group httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsee

Subsidiaries
  
The Hallion Club Limited, EH1 Limited, The Golf Tavern Limited, Illicit Still Limited

We are g1 group


G1 Group is a Scottish hospitality and leisure operator based in Glasgow, run by entrepreneur Stefan King. The company operates more than 45 venues, including some of Scotland's trendiest clubs, bars, restaurants and cinemas.

Contents

Ashton lane protest at g1 group


History

The G1 Group's first venue, Club X on Royal Exchange Square in Glasgow, was opened in 1990. In 2011, the Group moved into the former BBC headquarters in Queen Margaret Drive, which was built in 1869 and had housed BBC Scotland between 1936-2007. The G1 Group expanded into Edinburgh in 2011 after investing almost £30 million in acquiring a number of Edinburgh pubs.

Two-way mirror

The Shimmy Club in Glasgow, which is a G1 Group venue, hit headlines in 2013 after allowing male patrons to use a spy mirror into the women's bathrooms. The city's licensing board forced the venue to close for a week because of the risk of "predatory behaviour" towards young women, then ordered the club to remove the two-way mirror and put its staff through equalities training as a licensing condition.

The club had re-opened on 3 May 2013 following a £300,000 makeover, and the first complaints about the mirror were made that month; one complaint to the police was made by a 23-year-old woman following "an incident" relating to the two-way mirror. Clubbers said that there were no notices or signs to inform women entering the bathrooms that they could be spied on by men who had booked private booths on the other side of the mirror.

A post on the club's Facebook page at the time stated: "The Shimmy Club's two-way mirror is a design feature created as a bit of fun."

Rape joke quiz

G1 Group was forced to make a public apology in 2013 after a quizmaster at one of its venues repeatedly made "sexist, misogynistic and homophobic comments", including asking the question: "Is it still rape if you kill her first?" One member of the public said that after complaining to the quizmaster on the night, he and his friends were told they were no longer welcome at the bar.

The weekly event at Radio, a Glasgow bar owned by G1 Group, was axed after the complaints.

Disabled access

In 2014, a disabled couple won a discrimination case against G1 Group after they were refused entry from the Polo Lounge, a G1 Group venue. Bouncers did not allow them into the Glasgow venue, which the couple had visited before, because they claimed it had no disabled facilities.

Minimum wage

In 2015, G1 Group was named and shamed for not paying the minimum wage to almost 3,000 workers.

The firm illegally underpaid staff by more than £45,000 by making deductions from wages to pay for staff uniforms and training. G1 Group stopped this practice after it was named by the Department for Business Innovation and Skills in a list of companies that failed to pay the minimum wage.

References

G1 Group Wikipedia