I do several pubs...about 10 at the last count I think, and sone are georgian too
Ouside a doddle because of WFP, but insides quite hard work, however, if done weekly then they are easy, even with Georgian windows.
If monthly they have to be really scrubbed.
After April in Wales, as Roy said, all pubs will of course be non-smoking, I can't wait! will make life so much easier
How much yo ucharge is something else again, I for one do not work off an hourly rate, I find it too limiting, but by and large, where pubs are concerned, charge for double what you would charge for the outside.
But remember to quote as if everything is being done trad, and yes, I know you can't WFP the insides!
I think that with WFP, charging by the hour is more likely to see you charging less than you should.
Count up your windows, break then down into units and charge per unit.
For instance; A standard casement window, one opening light, one fixed pane underneath and one opening pane to the side is what I classify as a single unit, and for which I personally charge between 75p and a £1.00 for.
A standard size georgian window, say, 3 sets of 6 panes of glass I will charge around £1.50 for.
On upstairs work, every move of the ladder counts as 1 window, so £1.50 for a georgian window, and around a £1.00 for a squeegee one.
If you charge per hour you run the risk of only earning the same as you were before (if you changed to WFP) and will be doing more work for the same (or less once proper costing is taken into account) than before!
So if you were charging £1.50 for the outside of a pub window (georgian) then charge £3.00 for the inside and you won't go far wrong at that.
Ian