Liverpool Town Hall, Dale St,Merseyside,England,UK
Image details
Contributor:
Tony Smith / Alamy Stock PhotoImage ID:
GGWHBKFile size:
76.2 MB (2.8 MB Compressed download)Releases:
Model - no | Property - noDo I need a release?Dimensions:
7114 x 3744 px | 60.2 x 31.7 cm | 23.7 x 12.5 inches | 300dpiDate taken:
4 August 2016Location:
High St, Liverpool, Merseyside, England, UK L2 3SWMore information:
Liverpool Town Hall stands in High Street at its junction with Dale Street, Castle Street, and Water Street in Liverpool, Merseyside, England. It is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade I listed building, and described in the list as "one of the finest surviving 18th-century town halls". The authors of the Buildings of England series refer to its "magnificent scale", and consider it to be "probably the grandest ...suite of civic rooms in the country", and "an outstanding and complete example of late Georgian decoration". It is not an administrative building but a civic suite, Lord Mayor's parlour and Council chamber; local government administration is centred at the nearby Municipal Buildings. The town hall was built between 1749 and 1754 to a design by John Wood the Elder replacing an earlier town hall nearby. An extension to the north designed by James Wyatt was added in 1785. Following a fire in 1795 the hall was largely rebuilt and a dome designed by Wyatt was built. Minor alterations have subsequently been made. The streets surrounding its site have altered since its initiation, notably when viewed from Castle Street, the south-side, it appears as off-centre. This is because Water Street which ran to the junction with Dale Street, the west-east axis, was continuous and built up across the junction so that the Town Hall was not visible originally from that aspect. The structures were removed 150 years after this to expose the building from this position.