- Sheffield Old Town Hall
Sheffield Old Town Hall stands on Waingate in central
Sheffield ,England , oppositeCastle Market .The building was commissioned to replace
Sheffield 's firsttown hall , which had opened in 1700 to a design by William Renny. [William renny, a local builder, was paid £2 3s in 1699 for the 'draught' of the Town Hall and £200 for building it the following year; it was demolished in 1810, after the present structure had been built. (Howard Colvin , "A Biographicial Dictionary of British Architects, 1600-1840" 3rd ed. 1995, "s.v." "Renny, William". ] This first structure stood by the parish church, on a site with little prospect for extension.Pevsner Architectural Guides: Sheffield", Ruth Harman and John Minnis, eds.]The Old Town Hall was built in 1807–8 by Charles Watson, and was designed to house not only the Town Trustees but also the Petty and
Quarter Sessions . The initial building was a five-bay structure fronting Castle Street, but it was extended in 1833 and again in 1866 by William Flockton (1804-1864) of Sheffield and his partner for the project, Abbott; the most prominent feature was the new centralclock tower over a new main entrance that reoriented the building to Waingate. At the same time, the building'scourtroom s were linked by underground passages to the neighbouringSheffield Police Offices .The first Town Council was elected in 1843 and took over the lease of the Town Trustees' hall in 1866. The following year, the building was extensively renovated, with a clock tower designed byFlockton & Abbott being added.By the 1890s, the building had again become too small, and the current
Sheffield Town Hall was built further south. The Old Town Hall was again extended in 1896-7, by the renamedFlockton, Gibbs & Flockton , and becameSheffield Crown Court andSheffield High Court . In the 1990s, these courts moved to new premises, and since at least 1997 to present, the building remains disused.In 2007, it was named by the
Victorian Society as one of their top ten buildings most at-risk [cite web|url=http://www.victorian-society.org.uk/mostendangered.html|title=Top ten endangered buildings |publsiher=Victorian Society]References
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