Following significant population growth, largely associated with the lace and hosiery industries, the area became an urban district in 1894.[1] The early meetings of the new council were held at the Board Schools until the council commissioned its own offices at a site on Church Street in 1897.[2] In the mid-1930s, the council decided that the old council offices were inadequate: the site they selected for the new town hall was open land on the west side of Foster Avenue.[3] The old council officers were demolished during a wave of the redevelopment in the late 1960s and early 1970s.[4]
The new town hall was designed by Evans, Clark and Woollatt in the Neo-Georgian style, built by Hofton and Son in red brick with stone dressings at a cost of £18,500 and was officially opened on 24 March 1938.[5] The design involved a symmetrical main frontage with seven bays facing onto Foster Avenue; the central bay featured a double-panelled doorway flanked by brick pilasters and brackets supporting a stone balcony with an ogive-shaped window on the first floor. The middle bays in the outer sections featured sash windows on the ground floor and terracotta carvings of beehives, a play on the name of the town, on the first floor, while the other bays in the outer sections were fenestrated by sash windows. At roof level, there was a frieze and a cornice, broken by a central pediment. Internally, the principal room was the council chamber.[6]
The council established new council offices on the opposite side of Foster Avenue and moved its headquarters there in the early 1990s.[10] In 2005, the first annual Beeston Carnival took place: the focal point of the event was the parade, led by Beeston Pipe Band, from the town hall to Broadgate Park.[11][12] The council decided that the town hall was surplus to requirements in 2018 and, despite opposition from local community groups, sold the building to the Redeemer Church for £425,000 in January 2020.[13][14]
References
^"Beeston UD". Vision of Britain. Retrieved 20 March 2022.