1846 – Holy Trinity Platt Church, Manchester, Lancashire
The architect’s second “pot church”, so-called because the main building material used in the construction of the church is terracotta.
The architect’s second “pot church”, so-called because the main building material used in the construction of the church is terracotta.
A temporary exhibition structure built to hold the ‘Art Treasures of Great Britain”
From The Building News, September 19, 1862: The engraving on the opposite side represents the Manchester and Salford Bank which is just being erected.
From The Building News, August 8,
Designed by Alfred Waterhouse in the neo-Gothic style,
Formed as The Manchester Warehousemen and Clerks’
From The Builder: “We give a view of the Club building now in course of erection in Manchester.
Opened in 1873. In May 1879 Florence Nightingale wrote to the Secretary of the Hospital praising the structure of the building and asking for contact details of its architect.
Competition entry for new Conservative Club in Manchester,
Manchester Corporation decided in the early 1870s to replace the city’s main fish market in Strangeways with a new one located near Shudehill,