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Tower Building, Liverpool

Listed building in Liverpool, England


Listed building in Liverpool, England

FieldValue
nameTower Building
imageTower Building 1.jpg
image_alt
image_captionTower Building on George's Dock Gates
coordinates
addressLiverpool, England
years_built1906–10
architectWalter Aubrey Thomas
designations{{Designation list
embedyes
designation1Grade II* Listed Building
designation1_offnameTower Building
designation1_date14 March 1975
designation1_number

Tower Building is a Grade II* listed apartment block in Liverpool, England. It stands with its longer front on the east side of the Strand, and extends round the corner into Water Street. The building is located directly opposite the Royal Liver Building, which was designed by the same architect, Walter Aubrey Thomas. The structure was originally designed for use as an office building, and is one of the earliest steel-framed buildings in England. It has been converted into apartments and units for commercial and retail use.

Earlier buildings on the site have been a sandstone mansion, and a later fortified house known as the Tower of Liverpool. After this was demolished in 1819, it was replaced in 1846 by the first structure to be named Tower Building. Details of the current building's architecture reflect the earlier fortified building on the site.

History

The building stands on a historic site in the city. The first structure on the site had been a sandstone mansion, built in 1256 on the shore of the River Mersey. Its first owner is not known, but by 1360 it was owned by Sir Robert Lathom. By the beginning of the 15th century it was owned by Sir John Stanley. In 1406 Sir John gained permission from King Henry IV to build a fortified house, which was named the Tower of Liverpool. The Stanley family later became the Earls of Derby. By 1737 the house was being leased from the Earl of Derby by Liverpool Corporation. In 1745 part of it was converted into a prison, and the upper rooms were used for civic functions. In 1774 the Corporation bought the building outright. A new prison was built on Great Howard Street, and the building ceased to be used for this purpose in 1811. It was demolished in 1819 to allow for the widening of Water Street. The site was used for a row of warehouses, until in 1846 the first structure to be known as Tower Building was built to a design by Sir James Picton. The present building was designed in 1906 by Walter Aubrey Thomas, and its construction was completed in 1910. Thomas also designed the Royal Liver Building. Tower Building was one of the first steel-framed buildings in England.

Architecture

Tower Building is constructed on a steel frame. It is clad in grey granite, and faced with white glazed terracotta made by Doulton. The Strand front has eight storeys and nine bays, the Water Street front has five storeys plus attics and three bays, and there is a curved bay on the corner. The bays are divided by polygonal turrets. On each end of the Strand front is a two-storey tower, and above the central bay rises a three-storey tower. A balustrade runs along the top of the building and around the two lateral towers.

References

References

  1. Young, Young, & Muir. (1913). "Bygone Liverpool". Henry Young and Sons.
  2. Pye, Ken. (2011). "Discover Liverpool". Trinity Mirror Media.
  3. "Welcome". Tower Building, Liverpool.
  4. (2006). "Lancashire: Liverpool and the South-West". [[Yale University Press]].
Info: Wikipedia Source

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