A city centre pub with a "breathtaking" exterior adorned in glazed ceramic tiles - some bearing the name of a long-gone British beer - has been granted listed status. The Craven Arms, on the corner of Upper Gough Street and Blucher Street in Birmingham, was designed between 1906 and 1910, although a pub had stood in that location since at least the 1840s, Historic England said. Pubs were established in the city back then within industrial areas, along with new factories and workers’ houses, the organisation explained.

The Campaign for Real Ale (CAMRA) said the decision - which protects the site from certain redevelopments - was "terrific news". Grade II listed status was afforded by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport, and means special building consent must be secured before changes can be made that might affect the venue's special character. According to CAMRA, the distinctive pub has been given the safeguards it deserves.

Shelly Bentley, regional director, said: "The historic pub will now receive greater legal protection, hopefully safeguarding the community hub from unnecessary change or damage – preserving this beautiful, historic asset for generations to come." The pub's crowning glory is a sea of blue and yellow tiles. The glazed decorations, some of which are molded, adorn the ground floor, while the upper floors are of red brick and feature timber-framed windows.

The moldings remain as rare advertisements for Holder's Ale . Holder's Brewery was based in t.