Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

County Sessions House, Liverpool

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
OS grid reference
  
SJ 350 908

Designated
  
14 March 1975

Opened
  
1884

Architect
  
F & G Holme

Built
  
1882–84

Reference no.
  
1063783

Architectural style
  
Neoclassical architecture

County Sessions House, Liverpool

Location
  
Islington, Liverpool, Merseyside, England

Similar
  
Steble Fountain, Gustav Adolf Church - L, The Oratory - Liverpool, Toxteth Unitarian Chapel, Wellington's Column

The County Sessions House stands at the bottom of Islington in Liverpool, Merseyside, England, to the east of the Walker Art Gallery. It is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade II* listed building.

Contents

History

The courthouse was built between 1882 and 1884, and was designed by the Liverpool architects F & G Holme. It functioned as a local county courthouse, and contained three courtrooms, chambers for barristers and judges, cells, and facilities for administration. It is no longer used for these purposes.

Architecture

The building is constructed in ashlar stone on a granite base. Although its appearance is Neoclassical, its style is described as being "late Victorian" and "derived from Renaissance Venice rather than ancient Greece and Rome". It is built in a single storey with a basement, and its front has five bays. The basement is rusticated. At its front is a portico with eight paired columns, above which is a frieze bearing the inscription "COUNTY SESSIONS HOUSE". The tympanum contains the arms of Lancashire County Council. The windows have round arches and are flanked by Ionic pilasters. At the sides, five bays have similar columns, beyond which the building is plainer, in yellow brick and stone. The interior is complex and richly decorated. It contains an Italian Renaissance staircase.

References

County Sessions House, Liverpool Wikipedia