Improving physical and intellectual access

Rochdale Town Hall

Heritage-led regeneration

Rochdale Town Hall has reopened to the public after four years of work to repair and restore historically significant areas such as The Great Hall, the Mayor’s suite of rooms, and improve accessibility to open previously unseen spaces to the public for the first time.

Designed by William H Crossland and opening in 1871, this Grade I-listed masterpiece is recognised as one of the most historically significant Victorian buildings in the country. By the 21st century, the building fabric had become compromised and deemed unfit for the changing needs of Rochdale Borough Council. Supported by the National Lottery Heritage Fund and led by Rochdale Development Agency, a series of design interventions have been made to improve physical and intellectual access to this much-loved building.

Inside the Great Hall at Rochdale Town Hall, including the decorative timber beam-roof, stained glass windows, and hanging light fixtures, and a person standing in the room.
Newly refurbished Bright Hall, including hanging and wall lights, seven decorative ceiling panels, and windows on the back wall of the Hall.

Creating a space for everyone

In addition to extensive repair and restoration work undertaken to the most historically significant areas such as The Great Hall and the Mayor’s suite of rooms, previously unseen spaces are now accessible to the public for the first time. In the Bright Hall, unsympathetic 20th-century additions were removed to reveal a double-height ceiling, angles along the walls, and a hidden window into the Great Hall.

A series of internal and external adaptations were made to consolidate circulation and unlock public access, including an accessible terracing that wraps around the building, which replaces a series of aesthetically detracting individual ramps while giving level access to all external entrances. A lift and staircase, along with a glazed entrance, has been installed in the Alfred Waterhouse-designed clock tower.

The public realm has been transformed by removing surrounding roads and car parks. A multi-functional civic space, designed by Gillespies, offers a vibrant and accessible welcome to the Town Hall.

External view of Rochdale Town Hall, including historic paving between lawns in front of the building.
An elevated view of new paving in front of Rochdale Town Hall, with inscriptions of historic symbols, connected to the memorial gardens.

Powered by the community

The project has actively involved the local community and more than 500 volunteers from inception to completion. In addition, a heritage skills studio has been set up in the basement of the Town Hall, where a specialist conservator has been employed and can host volunteer training and workshops; the council aims to increase the number of employed conservators to three. The aims is to offer these specialist conservation services to other heritage buildings in the borough while maintaining a resource of local knowledge as a long-term legacy of the project.

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This programme of works is true heritage led regeneration as an instrument of social and urban change.

As with many social projects the funding was to come from many different sources including the local authority, National Lottery Heritage Fund, Salix, and Towns Fund.

Emma Birkett, Heritage Director, Rochdale Development Agency

Project team

  • Client: Rochdale Borough Council
  • Technical and client-side project management: Rochdale Development Agency
  • Lead consultant and conservation architect: Donald Insall Associates
  • Landscape architect: Gillespies
  • Main contractor: H.H. Smith & Sons
  • Cost Manager: Frank Whittle Partnership
  • M&E Engineer: Max Fordham
  • Structural and civil engineer: Price & Myers
  • Public realm civil engineers: Buro Happold
  • Exhibition design: Redman Design
  • Specialist conservation repairs: Hirst Conservation
  • Specialist cleaning and restoration: Lancashire Conservation Studios
  • Stained glass cleaning and repairs: The York Glaziers Trust

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