Newcastle Town Hall


The Town Hall was a local government building located in St Nicholas Square, Newcastle upon Tyne.

History

Until the mid-19th century civic leaders had held their meetings in the Guildhall. The town hall had its origins in the Corn Exchange which was designed by John and Benjamin Green and built in stone in St Nicholas Square by a private company in 1839.
The foundation stone for the new town hall was laid by the mayor, Sir Isaac Lowthian Bell, in 1855. The design, which was undertaken by John Johnstone in the Italian Neoclassical style, involved incorporating the Corn Exchange into the central section of the building as an assembly hall capable of accommodating 3,000 people: a large concert organ was acquired at that time. The design also involved a council chamber and municipal offices for Newcastle City Council. The main frontage of the new building, facing the cathedral, had four Corinthian order columns on the ground floor and also on the first floor while the back frontage, facing onto the Bigg Market, had a tower with a cupola. The works, which cost some £50,000, were completed in 1863.
The Kennel Club held its first organised dog show in the assembly hall in the building in 1859. The building as a whole was not well maintained and the tower had to be demolished in the 1930s.
By the middle of the 20th century condition of the town hall had deteriorated to such an extent that the council was forced to relocate to modern facilities at Newcastle Civic Centre in Barras Bridge in 1968. A "winter zoo" involving lions, tigers, monkeys, exotic birds and snakes continued to be held in the building in the late 1960s but, ultimately, the town hall had to be demolished in 1973. The site was subsequently occupied by a complex of modern office buildings known as No. 1 Cathedral Square and Stanegate House.