/Leedsplaces

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St Paul's House from St Paul's Street, showing the original entrance

St Paul's House is a Grade II* listed Victorian building in the Moorish style, in Park Square, Leeds, West Yorkshire, England. Built in 1878 for John Barran as a ready-made clothing factory, it is now used as offices after a major renovation in the 1970s.

The site edit

St Paul's House is on the south side of Park Square, replacing nine of the original Georgian houses of the square (numbers 15-23). It was built beside St Paul's Church, which was demolished in .... and replaced by offices for the Water Authority. It occupies land between Park Square and St Paul's Street, and its original entrance was in St Paul's Street. Park Square was a fashionable area of Leeds when first developed, but after Benjamin Gott's Bean Ings Mill was built (on the site of the current Yorkshire Post Newspapers offices), the square suffered from pollution and became less desirable.

The architect and client edit

Thomas Ambler had worked on several previous projects for Barran, including a shop at number 1 Boar Lane / 46 Basinghall Street in 1873 which showed innovative use of cast iron and glass (demolished for the Bond Street Centre). It is thought that Ambler may have been influenced by Owen Jones's recent measured drawings of the Alhambra, or by the Doge's Palace which he had seen on a visit to Venice.

Barran's business had expanded since he began with a single shop at number 1 Briggate: he had occupied factories in Alfred Street and Park Row, and by 1872 had 2,000 sewing machines, powered by gas engines.

The building edit

The Public Benefit Boot Company edit

In 1875 a Hull boot shop had opened....

Post war years edit

The building became neglected and was at risk of being demolished. In ... the Council applied an emergency protection notice....

Renovation edit

A major renovation project was undertaken, work starting on ... and the building being reopened on .... Niklaus Pevsner performed the opening ceremony, and said....

 
St Paul's House from Park Square, showing the new entrance

Category:Listed buildings in Leeds Category:Grade II* listed buildings in West Yorkshire

External links edit

  • Historic England. "Details from listed building database ({{{num}}})". National Heritage List for England.

53°47′55″N 1°33′09″W / 53.79861°N 1.55250°W / 53.79861; -1.55250


Leeds infobox edit

|blank1_name = ISO 3166-2 |blank1_info = GB-LDS |blank2_name = ONS code |blank2_info = 00DA |blank3_name = OS grid reference |blank3_info = SE296338 |blank4_name = NUTS 3 |blank4_info = UKE42 |blank5_name = Demonym |blank5_info = Leodiensian, Loiner (not widely used)



population box edit

Population growth in Leeds (current Metropolitan District area) since 1801
Year 1801 1811 1821 1831 1841 1851 1861 1871 1881 1891
Population 94,421 108,459 137,476 183,015 222,189 249,992 311,197 372,402 433,607 503,493
% change +14.87 +26.75 +33.13 +21.40 +12.51 +24.48 +19.67 +16.44 +16.12
Year 1901 1911 1921 1931 1941 1951 1961 1971 1981 1991 2001
Population 552,479 606,250 625,854 646,119 668,667 692,003 715,260 739,401 696,732 716,760 715,404
% change +9.73 +9.73 +3.23 +3.24 +3.49 +3.49 +3.36 +3.38 −5.77 +2.87 −0.19
Source: Vision of Britain[1]

Date autoformat test edit

Today is 4 April 2009 or April 4, 2009.

Sic edit

should of


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  1. ^ "Leeds District: total population". Vision of Britain. Retrieved on 19 December 2008.