Endangered Buildings Archives 2010 from The Victorian Society https://www.victoriansociety.org.uk/endangered-buildings-archive/2010/ Campaigning for Victorian and Edwardian Built Heritage Wed, 05 Jun 2024 11:57:55 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 https://www.victoriansociety.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/cropped-favicon-32x32.png Endangered Buildings Archives 2010 from The Victorian Society https://www.victoriansociety.org.uk/endangered-buildings-archive/2010/ 32 32 The Grimsby Ice Factory, Gorton Street, The Docks, Grimsby https://www.victoriansociety.org.uk/endangered-buildings/the-grimsby-ice-factory-gorton-street-the-docks-grimsby/ Tue, 19 Oct 2010 09:12:39 +0000 https://www.victoriansociety.org.uk/the-grimsby-ice-factory-gorton-street-the-docks-grimsby/ Key building from fishing’s past derelict and at risk. This vast factory produced ice for Grimsby’s fishing industry for 90 years. The building and its early 20th century ice machinery...

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Key building from fishing’s past derelict and at risk.

Photo Credit: The Victorian Society.

This vast factory produced ice for Grimsby’s fishing industry for 90 years. The building and its early 20th century ice machinery represent a key part of the town’s fishing heritage. It closed down in 1990 and is now a derelict industrial building marooned on private land owned by Associated British Ports. The company has no plans to demolish the Grade II* listed factory, but if the neglect continues it will eventually crumble. Ice was last made here in 1990 but the historic machinery which produced it is now open to the elements as the roof is no longer watertight. Local campaigners would like to see the Ice Factory brought back to life as part of a wider regeneration of the docks but there is still a long way to go.

 

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The Unitarian Chapel, Upper Brook Street, Manchester https://www.victoriansociety.org.uk/endangered-buildings/the-unitarian-chapel-upper-brook-street-manchester/ Tue, 19 Oct 2010 09:12:39 +0000 https://www.victoriansociety.org.uk/the-unitarian-chapel-upper-brook-street-manchester/ An early Pugin chapel, roofless since 2005 (1837-9, Charles Barry, Grade II*) The former Unitarian Chapel, later known as the Welsh Baptist Chapel is owned by Manchester City Council. It...

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An early Pugin chapel, roofless since 2005

(1837-9, Charles Barry, Grade II*)

The former Unitarian Chapel, later known as the Welsh Baptist Chapel is owned by Manchester City Council. It is the first known example of a Gothic nonconformist chapel and believed to have been an early collaboration between Sir Charles Barry and AWN Pugin before they worked together on the Palace of Westminster. Yet despite its national significance, the chapel has been neglected for decades, resulting in 2005 in the removal of its roof. The chapel is now open to the elements and largely a ruin. Despite this there is a glimmer of hope; the City Council is working on finding a tenant who is prepared to take the building on. Suggestions for its future have included student accommodation or a restaurant, but progress needs to be made soon or the city will lose an important part of its architectural heritage.

See the list entry for this building

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Royal Liverpool Seamen’s Orphanage, Newsham Park, Tuebrook, Liverpool https://www.victoriansociety.org.uk/endangered-buildings/royal-liverpool-seamens-orphanage-newsham-park-tuebrook-liverpool/ Tue, 19 Oct 2010 09:12:37 +0000 https://www.victoriansociety.org.uk/royal-liverpool-seamens-orphanage-newsham-park-tuebrook-liverpool/ Majestic building suffering badly from rot and neglect Alfred Waterhouse was commissioned by the Liverpool Seamen’s Orphan Institution to provide a home for children who had lost their families at...

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Majestic building suffering badly from rot and neglect

Alfred Waterhouse was commissioned by the Liverpool Seamen’s Orphan Institution to provide a home for children who had lost their families at sea. It remained an orphanage until 1949, later becoming Newsham Park Hospital. It finally closed in 1988 and since then has become increasingly derelict. Boarding on the windows and an onsite caretaker deter vandals and urban explorers, but water is still seeping in and dry rot is thought to be widespread. An application to convert the hospital into flats and build in its grounds was submitted a few years ago, but later withdrawn. Now a community group called the Newsham Park Community Development Association want to see the building brought back into use as a community facility, but progress is unlikely to be swift and in the meantime this wonderful building continues to be at risk.

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Normansfield Hospital, Kingston Road, Teddington, Middlesex https://www.victoriansociety.org.uk/endangered-buildings/normansfield-hospital-kingston-road-teddington-middlesex/ Tue, 19 Oct 2010 09:12:34 +0000 https://www.victoriansociety.org.uk/normansfield-hospital-kingston-road-teddington-middlesex/ Impressive private sanitorium in increasingly poor condition (1866, architect unknown, Grade II*) The state of the interior of this former private sanatorium for mentally handicapped children is appalling and clearly...

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Impressive private sanitorium in increasingly poor condition

(1866, architect unknown, Grade II*)

The state of the interior of this former private sanatorium for mentally handicapped children is appalling and clearly in a state of rapid decline. Fixtures such as fireplaces, switches and mouldings have been removed and graffiti and general destruction is visible throughout. Beyond that, the building is evidently suffering from an extreme case of damp and rot, making many of the floors unsafe. All this in a building listed at Grade II* because of its historic association with Dr Langdon-Down, and because of the intact survival of a rare private theatre. Normansfield hospital should have been developed in 2000 when permission was granted to convert the hospital into a hotel and restaurant and to build nearly 200 new homes in the grounds. The houses were built but the restoration of the historic hospital never happened. The hospital remains boarded up and a problem which gets harder to solve as its condition gets worse.

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Old Fire Station, Court Road, Barry, South Wales https://www.victoriansociety.org.uk/endangered-buildings/old-fire-station-court-road-barry-south-wales/ Tue, 19 Oct 2010 09:12:34 +0000 https://www.victoriansociety.org.uk/old-fire-station-court-road-barry-south-wales/ Edwardian fire station in an appalling state (1901, architect unknown, Grade II) Sadly after sitting empty for nearly 10 years this custom designed Edwardian fire station is now in an...

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Edwardian fire station in an appalling state

(1901, architect unknown, Grade II)

Sadly after sitting empty for nearly 10 years this custom designed Edwardian fire station is now in an advanced state of decay; part of the slate roof is missing, there are floors missing and lead has been stripped from its remarkable square practice tower. Earlier this year permission was granted to convert the ground floor of the building into offices, and create seven flats in the upper floors of the fire station, sub-dividing the tower. Work has yet to start and the Vale of Glamorgan is currently trying to force the owner to improve the condition of the site. The clock is ticking for this attractive landmark building as the interior is already riddled with dry rot and work needs to be done to the fabric of the fire station before it is too late.

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Former Wedgwood Institute, Queen Street, Burslem, Stoke-on-Trent https://www.victoriansociety.org.uk/endangered-buildings/former-wedgwood-institute-queen-street-burslem-stoke-on-trent/ Tue, 19 Oct 2010 09:12:30 +0000 https://www.victoriansociety.org.uk/former-wedgwood-institute-queen-street-burslem-stoke-on-trent/ Important historic building needing repair and a new use   (1869, G.B. Nichols, John Lockwood Kipling, Robert Edgar, Grade II*) Until recently the Wedgwood Institute was home to Burslem’s public...

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Important historic building needing repair and a new use

 

(1869, G.B. Nichols, John Lockwood Kipling, Robert Edgar, Grade II*)

Until recently the Wedgwood Institute was home to Burslem’s public library. In 2006 the council pledged money to restore this exceptional Grade II*-listed building but instead it closed down just two years later, without warning, due to structural problems. The library’s books have moved elsewhere and only small parts of the building are in temporary use. Outside its highly decorative façade is a homage to work; above the main entrance is a figure of Josiah Wedgwood and elsewhere terracotta panels depict the different processes in the manufacture of pottery – this is a building which is crying out for a real use. In the meantime the structural problems will only get worse if urgent repairs aren’t carried out.

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Former Moseley School of Art, Moseley Road, Birmingham https://www.victoriansociety.org.uk/endangered-buildings/former-moseley-school-of-art-moseley-road-birmingham/ Tue, 19 Oct 2010 09:12:29 +0000 https://www.victoriansociety.org.uk/former-moseley-school-of-art-moseley-road-birmingham/ Distinguished building in the process of steady decay   (1898, W.H. Bidlake, Grade II*) This is an area of Birmingham where a remarkable number of distinguished Victorian and Edwardian buildings...

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Distinguished building in the process of steady decay

 

(1898, W.H. Bidlake, Grade II*)

This is an area of Birmingham where a remarkable number of distinguished Victorian and Edwardian buildings still survive, but like the Moseley Road Baths opposite the School of Art is crying out for investment and care. The school was built in the ‘Wrenaissance’ style to the designs of the exceptional Birmingham Arts and Crafts architect, W.H.Bidlake. It closed down in 1975 and the building now belongs to the British Association of Muslims. Its condition is steadily deteriorating and is a cause of great concern for local heritage campaigners. Action needs to be taken soon to ensure that this attractive and important building has a future.

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Bradgate House Stables, Bradgate Hill, Groby, Leicestershire https://www.victoriansociety.org.uk/endangered-buildings/bradgate-house-stables-bradgate-hill-groby-leicestershire/ Tue, 19 Oct 2010 09:12:26 +0000 https://www.victoriansociety.org.uk/bradgate-house-stables-bradgate-hill-groby-leicestershire/ Striking survival from a previous age in disastrous condition (1856, M. J. Dain, Grade II* ) Bradgate House was demolished in 1926 but its elaborate stable block still survives, albeit...

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Striking survival from a previous age in disastrous condition

Photo: The Old Stables, Bradgate House.

(1856, M. J. Dain, Grade II* )
Bradgate House was demolished in 1926 but its elaborate stable block still survives, albeit in a ruinous and dilapidated condition. It was built on a lavish scale (the bill is thought to have run to £30,000) for the Seventh Earl of Stamford when he was made Master of Quorn Hunt in 1856. The stables and the surrounding land are now owned by an aggregate company and the area isn’t open to the public but the now roofless stable block can be seen from the nearby A50. A Royal Commission on the Historical Monuments of England survey was done in 1992 and over the years several ideas have been put forward to rescue the building, but so far nothing has proved viable. The stables are now desperately in need of help or these outstanding reminders of Leicestershire’s equestrian heritage will be lost for good.

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30 Euston Square, London https://www.victoriansociety.org.uk/endangered-buildings/30-euston-square-london/ Tue, 19 Oct 2010 09:12:22 +0000 https://www.victoriansociety.org.uk/30-euston-square-london/ Partly restored Neo-Grecian beauty under renewed threat from HS2   The Euston Arch was lost last time Euston station was redeveloped back in the early 1960s. That decision is widely...

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Partly restored Neo-Grecian beauty under renewed threat from HS2

 

The Euston Arch was lost last time Euston station was redeveloped back in the early 1960s. That decision is widely regretted and yet fifty years later we are in danger of seeing history repeat itself with Beresford Pite’s grand classical design at 30 Euston Square. The building is threatened by the Government’s plans for High Speed 2, the controversial high speed rail link that will reduce travel times between London and Birmingham, the North West and eventually Scotland. The Neo-Grecian building, built for the London, Edinburgh and Glasgow Assurance Company, is currently covered in scaffolding as its new owner, the Royal College of General Practitioners, has already started restoration work. The irony is that 30 Euston Square has been empty for years and now, just as it appears saved, the HS2 plans place it under threat once again.

 

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