THE LONDON CAFÉ WHERE YOU’LL BE ABLE TO HAVE YOUR COFFEE WITH CATS
Source: MyLondon (Extract)
Posted: September 4, 2020
You’ll also be able to decide if you want to adopt them.
The founder of a cat cafe in Pimlico believes she has found the purrfect way to help alleviate loneliness.
Geologist Florence Heath asked people to help get Maison du Chat cafe off the ground through a Crowdfunding campaign.
She told backers: “The therapeutic effect of cats is being increasingly documented and we hope our cats would help alleviate loneliness for some of our elderly neighbours. We would also like to run a project with a Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder charity and also a local project with autistic children to use the cats as pets therapy.”
Ms Heath lived in Libya, Siberia and the Netherlands during her career in the oil industry.
She set up pet rescue charity RANA – Rescue Animals of North Africa with a friend in 2013 and it has re-homed several hundred cats in the UK.
And she aims to bring rescue cats to the cafe and introduce them to people who might like to adopt them.
The UK’s first cat cafe opened in Shoreditch in 2014 and more sprang up including a cafe on the Holloway Road in North London.
Ms Heath’s application to convert a former estate agents office in Pimlico was approved by Westminster City Council’s planning committee.
The shop has stood empty for nearly two years in the street which has a mix of shops and homes.
When the plan was first submitted there were 23 objections, with some worries about noise and disturbance from a very small outdoor seating area, which has now been dropped. Others said they thought there were too many cafes in the area.
And 19 people wrote in to support the cafe in Moreton Street.
It aims to promote people’s mental health and well-being with seven to 10 cats on site.
The felines will be able to roam around the cafe with supervision and will be there for 3 to 4 weeks and can be adopted.
Food will be made off site and heated up at the cafe and it will also sell pet food and accessories.
Ms Heath also wants to hold coffee mornings for elderly people and mother and toddler groups in a function room. The aim is to act as a social community hub.
“We think it will be a unique use in this part of Moreton Street,” said planning officer David Dorward.
“This really is a novel use of a property,” added committee vice chair Robert Rigby.
And councillor Elizabeth Hitchcock said: “It is welcomed in difficult trading conditions to try something different and stand out from the crowd.”
One resident who supported the scheme said: “interaction between pets and humans can be educational and fun”.