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Nottingham Council House is the city hall of Nottingham, England. The 200 feet (61 m) high dome that rises above the city is the centrepiece of the skyline and presides over the Old Market Square which is also referred to as the "City Centre". It is a Grade II* listed building. [1]
Nottingham Guildhall from the Illustrated Guide to the Church Congress 1897. Nottingham Guildhall was built in 1887 to 1888 to replace the previous Nottingham Guild Hall on Weekday Cross. Following a competition with Alfred Waterhouse as the judge, the French Renaissance Revival design by the architects Thomas Verity and George Henry Hunt was ...
The original Albert Hall was started in 1873 as a Nottingham Temperance Hall. Watson Fothergill, a local architect won the commission and the builders were Richard Stevenson and Field Weston. The hall was opened on 26 September 1876 [1] by the Mayor of Nottingham even though it was unfinished. The entrance hall and corridors were unfinished ...
In 1726 Nottingham Corporation built a new town hall in the Market Place which became known as the Nottingham Exchange. The old town hall on Weekday Cross continued to be used alongside the Exchange and was refaced in brick in 1744. [1] The building was raised several feet higher, [2] and a new clock was provided by local clockmaker, John Wyld ...
Nottingham Council House; Nottingham Crown Court; Nottingham General Hospital; Nottingham Guild Hall; Nottingham Guildhall; Nottingham Hockey Centre; Nottingham London Road railway station; Nottingham Magistrates' Court; Nottingham Mechanics' Institution; Nottingham Royal Concert Hall; Nottingham station; Nottingham Victoria railway station ...
Located in the heart of Nottingham City Centre, the square is bounded by Beastmarket Hill to the West, Long Row to the North, and South Parade to the South. The Eastern end of the square is dominated by the Council House, which served as Nottingham's town hall until 2010, when the administration moved to the newly acquired Loxley House on ...
The Nottingham Royal Centre incorporates the 2,500-seater Royal Concert Hall and the Victorian Theatre Royal. The Royal Concert Hall is the region's top venue for classical music and regularly plays host to world-class orchestras and ballets, while the Theatre Royal is considered one of the finest venues in the country for major touring West ...
Interior of the concert hall, in 2009. Following significant population growth, largely associated with the brickmaking industry, a local board of health was appointed in Bulwell in the early 1870s. In this context, the new local board of heath decided to commission a town hall. [2]