Middlesex Guildhall

Middlesex Guildhall
General information
Type Court building
Location London
Address Parliament Square, London, SW1P 3BD
Construction started 1906
Completed 1913
Renovated 2007–2009
Design and construction
Architect J. S. Gibson
Renovating team
Renovating firm Feilden+Mawson LLP
Detail of the façade

The Middlesex Guildhall is the home of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom and of the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council. It stands on the south-west corner of Parliament Square in London.

History

The location in Parliament Square was the site of the belfry of Westminster Abbey. It was used as a market from 1750 to 1800. The justices of the City and Liberty of Westminster took it over. They commissioned a guildhall, designed as an octagon with a Doric portico by Samuel Pepys Cockerell in 1805. In 1889 Westminster became part of the County of London, outside of the county of Middlesex. In the division of property between the Middlesex and London county councils, the guildhall at Westminster went to Middlesex in exchange for the Middlesex Sessions House in Clerkenwell. A neo-Tudor guildhall was constructed on the site in 1893 by F. H. Pownall.[1]

The current building was built between 1912 and 1913, designed by J. S. Gibson, in what Pevsner called an "art nouveau gothic" style. The Guildhall has a doorway in the rear that dates from the seventeenth century. Originally part of the Tothill Fields Bridewell prison, it was moved to this site to be incorporated in the building. It is decorated with medieval-style gargoyles and other architectural sculptures by Henry Charles Fehr.

When the county council and the Middlesex sessions were abolished in 1965, the Guildhall continued to be used by the Greater London Quarter Sessions. After the abolition of the Quarter Sessions, it was used as a Crown Court centre.

The Middlesex Guildhall was closed for refurbishment in 2007 to convert it for use as the site of the new Supreme Court of the United Kingdom[2] and the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council. The Supreme Court, established in law by the Constitutional Reform Act 2005, started operations on 1 October 2009.

Controversy over conversion

Justices' library in the Supreme Court building

After the government chose the Middlesex Guildhall as home for the new Supreme Court, it was realised that a great deal of work was required to renovate the building and adapt it to the new use. Renovation plans were developed by architects Feilden+Mawson LLP, supported by Foster & Partners.[3]

Conservation groups were concerned that the planned conversion would be unsympathetic to such an important historic building. The Middlesex Guildhall is a Grade II* listed building,[4] and the statement of importance by English Heritage classed the three main Court interiors as "unsurpassed by any other courtroom of the period in terms of the quality and completeness of their fittings" on 26 August 2004. The conversion works involved the removal of many of the original fixtures and fittings. SAVE Britain's Heritage unsuccessfully contested the conversion.[5]

See also

References

  1. Robbins, Michael (1953). Middlesex. A New Survey of England. Collins.
  2. Hansard – Commons | Houses of Parliament
  3. Department for Constitutional Affairs – Constitutional Reform
  4. Historic England. "Grade II* (423608)". Images of England. Retrieved 17 September 2009.
  5. "The Supreme Court and the Middlesex Guildhall – the real story". SAVE Britain's Heritage. Retrieved 27 May 2018.

Further reading

  • The Supreme Court of the United Kingdom: History, Art, Architecture Chris Miele ed. (Merrell) ISBN 978-1-85894-508-8

Coordinates: 51°30′01.3″N 0°07′41.3″W / 51.500361°N 0.128139°W / 51.500361; -0.128139

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