A West Wickham pub is finally reopening after being "turned into a boat" following nine months of closure due to flooding.

The Coney, in Croydon Road, was forced to shut in February after the torrential flooding most of the UK experienced.

However, while the rest of the country dried out, water kept on gushing into The Coney.

The cellar of the pub was awash with more than three feet of water in some places - which did not stop rising until around June.

Chairman of Mountain Range Restaurants who own the eatery, Stephen May, explained: "We couldn't figure out where the water was coming from, was it rain? Was it the water table? Or was it the water authority? At one point Thames Water thought it was a burst water main."

In an attempt to find the source of the mysterious leak, Thames Water even closed off and dug up the road to try and find the possible burst water main - with no luck.

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To this day, Mr May confirmed they are not quite sure what caused the never ending leak, but in the end all parties and insurance companies simply came together and compromised.

He added: "They were trying to test the water to see if it came from the sky, the ground, or from a water treatment centre. But when it's been sitting in a basement you can't figure it out."

The water was finally able to be pumped out after it stopped rising in June, but the cellar and everything in it was a write-off.

Mr May said: "The water came up as high to affect the electricity. Basically everything below the water line had to be removed and replaced; fridges, ovens, kegs, everything.

"The cellar was like a boat with a leak, they had to tank it, which means giving it a new skin. The basement is like a boat now."

However, more damage was caused during the much-needed repair work.

Mr May, 54, said: "They had to dig out a lot of stuff - we had a concrete staircase which they had to chip away! Massive damage was caused to fix it - repairing everything caused more damage!

"Of course now we're world experts in building, but it's probably never going to happen again."

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The façade was not the only thing to suffer, as managers who lived above the building - who had a young daughter - were rehoused in rented accommodation after the electricity had to be shut off.

After many months with no open date in site, the staff also found other employment, but Mr May said there always room for them if they wanted to return.

He added: "At one point we weren't sure if we were ever going to reopen. It would never have happened if people hadn't helped; chefs even got out paintbrushes and started painting!"

First opening around five years ago, The Coney can finally announce it will be throwing open its doors to the public once again, with a grand reopening planned for November 26.