Chelsea Town Hall

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Chelsea Town Hall

Middlesex

Chelsea Library and Town Hall, Kings Road SW3 (geograph 2752474).jpg
The Stokes extension on King's Road
Location
Grid reference: TQ27287808
Location: 51°29’15"N, 0°10’6"W
Town: Chelsea
History
Address: King's Road
Built 1887
By: John McKean Brydon
Neoclassical style
Information
Condition: Converted
Owned by: Kensington & Chelsea Council

Chelsea Town Hall is a municipal building in King's Road, Chelsea in Middlesex. The oldest part is a Grade II* listed building[1] and the later part is Grade II listed.[2]

History

The town hall was commissioned to replace a mid-19th-century vestry hall on King's Road, which had been designed by William Willmer Pocock in the Italianate style for the Parish of St Luke's and which had been found to be structurally unsound.[3]

The oldest part of the current complex is the vestry hall in Chelsea Manor Gardens, which was designed by John McKean Brydon in the Neoclassical style and built by a local builder, Charles Wall; it was officially opened on 12 January 1887.[1] The design involved a symmetrical main frontage with nine bays facing onto Chelsea Manor Gardens; the central section of three bays featured three windows above which there was a large Venetian window flanked by huge Ionic order pilasters supporting a pediment.[1] A cupola with a dome and weather vane was erected at roof level.[1] This building became the headquarters of the Metropolitan Borough of Chelsea on its formation in 1900.[4] Internally, the main rooms were the main hall, which was particularly ornate,[5] a smaller hall and the Cadogan Suite, the latter two being located in side wings off the main hall.[3]

After civic leaders found that Pocock's vestry hall was structurally unsound, they elected to demolish it and construct a new structure to the designs of Leonard Stokes in the Neoclassical style on the King's Road site.[2] The works were carried out by A.N. Coles of Plymouth at a cost of £35,000 and completed in 1907.[4] The design for this frontage involved 15 bays with two sections at either end with doorways with fanlights flanked by windows and by full-height Ionic order columns supporting pediments; the two end-sections also had windows on the first floor.[2] The frontage also had a clock which projected over the street and central bellcote.[2]

The complex ceased to be the local seat of government when the borough was abolished in 1965, but the Brydon building became the main Register Office for the area,[6] and subsequently hosted several famous weddings.[7][8]

After being refurbished by Roderick Ham & Partners, the Stokes extension became the main Chelsea branch library in 1978.[4] The Chelsea Art Society also decided to establish its home in the Stokes extension in 1994 and it began to hold a series of annual exhibitions there showing work by both professional and non-professional artists.[9] An internal refurbishment of the rooms in the Brydon building was completed by Ark Build in February 2019.[10]

References