Hooters given major warning as deadline looms for city centre venue Signs outside the Water Street venue have caused a stir for almost three years A deadline has been set for the controversial orange Hooters signs to come down The Liverpool branch of Hooters has been given a deadline to take down controversial signs outside its city centre location before financial penalties kick in. It was confirmed last month the former operator of the venue on Water Street had been slapped with a fine amid the ongoing saga over bright orange signage outside the building. Almost three years after they first went up, Beauvoir Developments Ltd - the firm which brought the brand to the city - was fined for putting up large orange displays without the permission of the city council. ‌ Article continues below The company, which went into administration in January, was sentenced in absentia at Sefton Magistrates Court for the failure to comply with requirements and regulation over the making, retaining or furnishing of documents on two occasions in 2023. After years of wrangling and ignoring the city council’s requests, Beauvoir will be forced to pay thousands of pounds for their failure to comply. Now, Liverpool Council has confirmed when the signs must come down by following negotiations with new owners of the site. Following the Beauvoir’s collapse into administration at the start of the year, a new firm - New Zealand Leisure Ltd - took over the city centre venue. A spokesperson from the local authority has told the LDRS the business has until April 30 to take down the large bright displays. ‌ The controversial signs outside Hooters in Liverpool city centre (Image: Liverpool ECHO ) The row first ignited in October 2022 just before the restaurant’s opening a month later. While the city’s licensing committee was happy to grant permission for the new venue to operate, the local authority’s planning body was not keen on two large neon orange signs to be placed outside New Zealand House. As such, planning permission for those was rejected. However, this didn’t stop the business, who put the signs up anyway. ‌ An appeal to retain the signs was also thrown out by the planning inspectorate. Officials said there was “no public benefit that could outweigh the harm identified” by the signage. Hooters has offered a 'world class husband creche' (Image: Liverpool Echo ) Further efforts were made to retain the brand iconography outside the business, with permission for slightly smaller signs, which were also knocked back by Liverpool Council in August 2023. The business was given 14 days to take the signs down or face prosecution. ‌ Ultimately the row concluded in a court room, with magistrates fining Beauvoir Developments - and its director Rachel Tansey - £1,500 with a victim surcharge of £1,200. She was ordered to pay costs of £3,505. The Hooters restaurant is based on Water Street (Image: Liverpool Echo ) It was the second time in a month Ms Tansey has found herself at the mercy of the legal system, after being handed a 12-month community hour with 130 hours of unpaid work following her inability to complete a roadside breath test as she had undergone cosmetic lip surgery. The 44-year-old mum-of-three was pulled over by the police on the Formby bypass after her Land Rover was seen travelling "all over the road" at 20mph in a 60mph zone.