Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Prudential Assurance Building, Liverpool

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Country
  
England

Client
  
Prudential Assurance

Construction started
  
1855

Architect
  
Alfred Waterhouse

Completed
  
1856

Opened
  
1856

Town or city
  
Dale Street, Liverpool

Prudential Assurance Building, Liverpool httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Architectural styles
  
Gothic Revival architecture, Victorian architecture

Similar
  
Hargreaves Building, 1 Princes Dock, Gustav Adolf Church - L, German Church - Liverpool, County Sessions House - Li

The Prudential Assurance Building is a Grade II listed, Victorian Gothic revival style office building located on Dale Street in the centre of Liverpool, England.

Map of Prudential Assurance Building, Liverpool, UK

It was designed by local architect Alfred Waterhouse (also noted for the Natural History Museum and Manchester Town Hall) and was constructed in under a year in the mid-19th century. The building was commissioned by the country's leading insurance provider Prudential as its new regional offices in Liverpool. It was part of a series of buildings commissioned by the Prudential from Waterhouse including the firm's headquarters in Holborn, London. Like the other Prudential commissions, the building is noted for its use of red architectural terracotta and brick. It has a tower which was added to the building by the architect's son Paul Waterhouse in 1905. Exterior tiles between the first and second floor of the building read Prudential Assurance Buildings, the pluralism of this is somewhat inaccurate as it is in fact only one building.

Alongside the likes of Liverpool Town Hall, Bank of England Building, India Buildings, White Star Building and the Tower Buildings. The Prudential Assurance Building is amongst the most architecturally important buildings in the commercial district which is one of the six areas that constitute Liverpool's status as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

References

Prudential Assurance Building, Liverpool Wikipedia