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Preston Guild Hall

Entertainment venue in Preston, Lancashire, England


Entertainment venue in Preston, Lancashire, England

FieldValue
namePreston Guild Hall
fullnamePreston Guild Hall and Charter Theatre
image[[File:Preston Guild Hall 1.jpg250px]]
captionPictured in April 2015
pushpin_mapUnited Kingdom Preston central
pushpin_map_captionLocation in Preston city centre
coordinates
locationPreston, Lancashire
typeConcert venue (Grand Hall)
Theatre (Charter Theatre)
opened
ownerPreston City Council
operatorPreston Guild Hall Ltd
capacity2,034 (Grand Hall)
780 (Charter Theatre)
350 (Foyer)
acreage1,087 m2 (Grand Hall)
336 m2 (Charter Theatre)
529 m2 (Foyer)
public_transitPreston bus station

Theatre (Charter Theatre) 780 (Charter Theatre) 350 (Foyer) 336 m2 (Charter Theatre) 529 m2 (Foyer) Preston Guild Hall is an entertainment venue in Preston, Lancashire, England, which opened in 1973.

History

The Guild Hall was commissioned to replace the town's Public Hall. The new building, which was designed by Robert Matthew, Johnson Marshall, was due to be ready for the Preston Guild of 1972, but after construction was delayed, it only officially opened in 1973.

The complex has two performance venues, the Grand Hall which holds 2,034 people and the Charter Theatre which holds 780 people. There is direct pedestrian access, via footbridge, from the adjacent Preston bus station and car park.

Artists that have performed at the venue include Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, Libor Pešek and Vasily Petrenko. Led Zeppelin and David Bowie both performed at the venue in 1973 and The Smiths in 1986 among others. Bing Crosby gave one of his last concerts at the Guild Hall in September 1977, less than a month before his death. It also hosted the UK Snooker Championship for the years 1978 to 1997.

In 2013, Preston City Council considered demolishing the venue due to high running costs, but instead sold it in 2014 to local businessman Simon Rigby for an undisclosed sum, later revealed to be £1. In return Rigby promised to spend £1m in renovations. Ongoing financial problems saw Rigby close the venue in May 2019 and he was forced to place the business into administration. Preston City Council, one of the company's creditors, subsequently reclaimed possession of the building, citing "significant breaches" in the lease agreement and the "unacceptable behaviour" of Rigby's attempt to transfer ownership to a charity of which he was a trustee.

The building was due to host the Business Expo in April 2020 but this event had to be cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The Guild Hall was set to reopen in November 2023 but this was delayed until March 2024 due to concerns over the use of aerated concrete on the site.

References

References

  1. "Music in Preston". Made in Preston.
  2. "Historic Building Record: Preston Guild Hall". Preston Council.
  3. "About us". Preston Guild Hall.
  4. "History of the Guild Hall Preston". The Guildhall, Preston.
  5. (4 September 2024). "Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra – The Birds". Creative Community Group.
  6. (6 September 2008). "Pick of the week: North: Classical & opera". The Guardian.
  7. (17 January 2014). "Royal salute for The Emperor". The Lancashire Post.
  8. (10 January 2013). "Venue has hosted rock royalty". [[Lancashire Evening Post]].
  9. Moon, Naomi. (2020-09-14). "When Bing Crosby came to Preston...".
  10. (8 June 2019). "Goodbye Guildhall: A look through time". Preston Hub.
  11. (11 January 2013). "Preston Guild Hall could be bulldozed". BBC News.
  12. (5 July 2014). "Preston Guild Hall sold to businessman Simon Rigby". BBC News.
  13. Musgrove, Catherine. (2020-08-27). "Simon Rigby: the 'Preston-mad' businessman who bought - then lost - the Guild Hall".
  14. "About Preston Guild Hall • Preston Guild Hall & Charter Theatre".
  15. (2 July 2014). "Preston's Guild Hall saved". Lancashire Evening Post.
  16. (30 May 2019). "Preston Guild Hall staff laid off as owner closes venue". BBC.
  17. Titley, Megan. (2019-08-19). "Strip show debt is catalyst for Preston Guild Hall tipping into administration".
  18. (21 June 2019). "Council reclaims troubled Guild Hall". BBC News.
  19. Titley, Megan. (2019-06-20). "City council steps in to take control of Preston Guild Hall citing Simon Rigby’s ‘unacceptable behaviour’".
  20. (13 May 2020). "How major Preston developments have progressed during lockdown". Lancs Live.
  21. "Guild Hall closed pending surveys amid national roofing fears".
  22. (2023-11-10). "Preston Weekender delayed due to RAAC: new date and more event plans, including line-up, confirmed".
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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