Page 1 of 5 123 ... LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 41
  1. #1
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
    Location
    The land where men are men and sheep are dumb
    Posts
    685
    Thanks
    44
    Thanked 157 Times in 120 Posts

    Arrow Manchester City Hall. Heritage Day. Sept 12th 2010. Pic Heavy.

    Day two of the Heritage weekend saw myself, Juddersman62 and joybee head over to Manchester to see the magnificent Town Hall. We had intended to take in the Law Library and the Victorian Baths as well, but this place was just too beautiful to leave. If any of you haven't been here before! Then I highly recommend you do. It literally took my breath away.

    Here's some of the history.

    The building of Manchester Town Hall (1868 - 77) was undertaken because the neo-classical Town Hall in King Street had become too small to house the expanding business of the Corporation. A competition was held and won by Alfred Waterhouse (1830 - 1905), mainly for his ingenious planning. The site was an irregular triangle on which had to be fitted a large hall, a suite of reception rooms and living quarters for the Lord Mayor, as well as offices for all the Corporation departments and a chamber for Council meetings. Waterhouse successfully combined the ceremonial and workaday requirements.

    The Town Hall was designed in the thirteenth century Gothic style but it was, in Waterhouse's words, a building "essentially of the nineteenth century." It incorporated such innovations as a warm air heating system. The structure comprises fourteen million bricks encased in spinkwell stone.

    The exterior of the Town Hall, which is now a Grade One listed building, bears some notable sculptures. Over the main door is a statue of the Roman General Agricola, who founded Mamucium in 79 AD. Above him are Henry III and Elizabeth I, while at the apex of the main door gable is a statue of St. George.

    Centrally placed is the imposing 280 foot high clock tower. The clock mechanism was made by Gillet and Bland, and was started on New Year's Day 1879. The inscription on the three clock faces which are visible from Albert Square reads "Teach us to number our Days." There are 24 bells in the tower; the Great Hour Bell weighs 8 ton and 2 cwt and is called Great Abel, named after Abel Heywood, the Mayor at the time of the official opening. He laid the pinnacle stone of the spire on December 4th 1875. The formal opening ceremony took place on 13 September 1877.

    The cost of the Town Hall was around £1 million. The main Albert Square entrance has an archway 7 feet deep - the thickness of the wall supporting the main tower. In the glass mosaic roof of the entrance hall is an oak trapdoor through which the tower's bells can be lowered to street level. On one side of the entrance hall is Chantrey's statue of the famous chemist and philosopher, John Dalton and on the other, a statue of the great physicist, James Joule.
    Sculpture Hall

    The Sculpture Hall is on the right of the main entrance. This unusual hall measures 53 feet by 33 feet wide, with a groined roof of Bath stone brought from the Forest of Dean. Amongst the statues are those of conductor Sir Charles Hallé; Anti-corn Law League campaigners, Richard Cobden and John Bright and the remarkable triptych of celebrated Hallé Orchestra conductor, Sir John Barbirolli.
    Staircases

    Seven staircases lead from level one to level two. The first two make up the grand staircases leading up from the Sculpture Hall to the state rooms; then there are the two centre block staircases followed by the three spiral staircases which are known as the English, Scottish and Irish staircases because each country provided granite for the steps and columns of one of them. Waterhouse designed the "easy tread stairs" to enable the Victorian ladies in their finery to ascend the stairs without having to look down. He ingeniously concealed the gas pipe, which carried the gas for the lighting, underneath the banister rails of the spiral staircases.
    Great Hall and state rooms

    The second floor is the most impressive of the Town Hall and contains the Great Hall and the staterooms.

    * The Lord Mayor's Parlour is a lofty room hung with portraits of public figures and paintings presented to the authority.
    * The Reception Room has a fireplace of alabaster and bears the figures of Truth and Justice.
    * The Banqueting Room boasts two fireplaces, one of Hopton Wood stone and the other of oak. Above one of the fireplaces is the minstrels' gallery.
    * The Conference Hall, which was the original Council Chamber, contains an interesting oak screen and canopy and a gallery. Above the landing in front of
    * The Great Hall is a glazed skylight on which are inscribed the names of mayors, lord mayors and chairs of the Council since Manchester received its Charter of Corporation in 1838. The superb ceiling of the Great Hall is separated into panels bearing the arms of the principal countries and towns with which Manchester traded. The landing outside the Great Hall is known as the Bees. On the mosaic floor is a pattern of bees. The bee is symbolic of Manchester's industry and is found on the city's coat of arms. Manchester's involvement in the cotton trade is commemorated by a border of white strands and stylised cotton flowers on the mosaic floors. The 4,500 yards of marble flooring was laid by Venetian craftsmen.


    The usual externals to kick things off.

    I hope you enjoy









    The Central Courtyard.



    The Arched Walkway.



    The dramatic curvature between the Town Hall extension and the Library.



    And now the interior of this stunning building.







    I love the way the light makes the 24 carat gold leaf on the ceiling glow.













    The Bees

















    More to follow
    ON A JOURNEY OF DECAY

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
    Location
    The land where men are men and sheep are dumb
    Posts
    685
    Thanks
    44
    Thanked 157 Times in 120 Posts

    Default Re: Manchester Town Hall. Heritage Day. Sept 12th 2010. Pic Heavy.

    And the rest.........









































    Thanks for looking
    ON A JOURNEY OF DECAY

  3. The Following 6 Users Say Thank You to SilentHill For This Useful Post:

    ceejam (13-09-2010), JEP27 (13-09-2010), Midnight Rambler (13-09-2010), scrappy (13-09-2010), TK421 (17-08-2011)

  4. #3
    Join Date
    Mar 2010
    Location
    runcorn
    Posts
    189
    Thanks
    19
    Thanked 16 Times in 14 Posts

    Default Re: Manchester City Hall. Heritage Day. Sept 12th 2010. Pic Heavy.

    What a superb report on a truly stunning place,
    "And the rest" you are so sad fella.....
    Keep it up fella truly magnificent stuff you are pumping out lately bud

  5. #4
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
    Location
    The land where men are men and sheep are dumb
    Posts
    685
    Thanks
    44
    Thanked 157 Times in 120 Posts

    Default Re: Manchester City Hall. Heritage Day. Sept 12th 2010. Pic Heavy.

    Get yer arse here ceejam....... You will simply love it
    ON A JOURNEY OF DECAY

  6. #5
    Join Date
    Mar 2010
    Location
    runcorn
    Posts
    189
    Thanks
    19
    Thanked 16 Times in 14 Posts

    Default Re: Manchester City Hall. Heritage Day. Sept 12th 2010. Pic Heavy.

    So wish I could have done it, yes I think I would love it too, Just a good job you captured it so well. It certainly is as close to being there when you've done it so well.
    Last edited by ceejam; 13-09-2010 at 02:57 PM.

  7. #6
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Location
    T'uddersfield.
    Posts
    1,064
    Thanks
    35
    Thanked 156 Times in 149 Posts

    Default Re: Manchester City Hall. Heritage Day. Sept 12th 2010. Pic Heavy.

    Thats cool, the halls a bit harry potter.
    Saviour of the sporran

  8. #7
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
    Posts
    249
    Thanks
    3
    Thanked 8 Times in 5 Posts

    Default Re: Manchester City Hall. Heritage Day. Sept 12th 2010. Pic Heavy.

    Bloody hell fire, who knew Manchester would have something so Grand
    www.thetimechamber.co.uk - History:Photography:Music

    This production does not contain any references to 'the bird'

  9. #8
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
    Location
    The land where men are men and sheep are dumb
    Posts
    685
    Thanks
    44
    Thanked 157 Times in 120 Posts

    Default Re: Manchester City Hall. Heritage Day. Sept 12th 2010. Pic Heavy.

    Quote Originally Posted by 4737carlin View Post
    wow incredible, from the Bees to the arches!! how often is that place open? id drive over to see that anytime!!
    You're best bet is to ring them mate. We decided against joining the hourly mass tour and wandered at will. Although we did have to sign a disclaimer seeing as we looked the part with a multitude of camera gear

    It's deffo worth the trip if you can get permission to photograph it
    ON A JOURNEY OF DECAY

  10. #9
    Join Date
    Feb 2009
    Location
    Runcorn, Cheshire
    Posts
    329
    Thanks
    13
    Thanked 21 Times in 19 Posts

    Default Re: Manchester City Hall. Heritage Day. Sept 12th 2010. Pic Heavy.

    Totally stunning

  11. #10
    Join Date
    May 2009
    Posts
    261
    Thanks
    12
    Thanked 55 Times in 44 Posts

    Default Re: Manchester City Hall. Heritage Day. Sept 12th 2010. Pic Heavy.

    Just ring they will always let you take images over the weekends had a good old mooch here in the past myself, all so at night we was just getting some shelter from the rain in the door way security said cool to have a wonder on the open parts some years back but there relaxed about people taking images.. Stunning set BTW..

Page 1 of 5 123 ... LastLast

Similar Threads

  1. Medlock Culvert, Manchester - Sept 2010.
    By crippletron 3000 in forum Underground
    Replies: 1
    Last Post: 13-09-2010, 11:22 AM
  2. Archived: Heritage Open Day at City Hall Bradford
    By Rochester in forum Heritage and Historical Sites
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 11-09-2010, 09:12 PM
  3. Mapperley Tunnel - 4th & 12th April 2010
    By markus250 in forum Underground
    Replies: 9
    Last Post: 03-05-2010, 12:06 AM
  4. Leeds City Hall - Sept 08 - Heritage Day ARCHIVED
    By KingElvis in forum Heritage and Historical Sites
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 14-09-2008, 08:23 AM

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •