Lewin's Mead Unitarian meeting house is a former Unitarian church in Bristol, England.
The building
The meeting house was constructed in 1788–1791 in Lewin's Mead on the site of a 1705 chapel; before that, the site had been a Franciscan monastery. The chapel was designed in the Neoclassical style by William Blackburn.[1] It was built to hold 400 people, with stables and coach-house. A lecture room was added in 1818, and schoolrooms in 1826.[2] (Another source says 1000 people.[3])
A Grade II* listed building since 1959, it was converted to offices in 1987 by Feilden Clegg architects, and housed the offices of a construction consultancy, Provelio.[4]
In January 2017 it was purchased by Emmanuel Bristol, a family of Church of England churches, for its city centre congregation.
The congregation and ministers
In the eighteenth century, the congregation was wealthy.[5]
^Bredley, James (2002). Religion, revolution, and English radicalism : nonconformity in eighteenth-century politics and society (1st pbk. ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 205. ISBN9780521890823.
^Nonconformist Chapels and Meeting-houses, Gloucestershire. London: HMSO Books. 1986. ISBN0-11-300008-1.
^Bredley, James (2002). Religion, revolution, and English radicalism : nonconformity in eighteenth-century politics and society (1st pbk. ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 205. ISBN9780521890823.