History in Structure

Moorlands House

A Grade II Listed Building in City and Hunslet, Leeds

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Coordinates

Latitude: 53.7975 / 53°47'50"N

Longitude: -1.5449 / 1°32'41"W

OS Eastings: 430071

OS Northings: 433556

OS Grid: SE300335

Mapcode National: GBR BJL.PH

Mapcode Global: WHC9D.7TK5

Plus Code: 9C5WQFW4+X2

Entry Name: Moorlands House

Listing Date: 19 March 1970

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1256606

English Heritage Legacy ID: 464727

ID on this website: 101256606

Location: Leeds, West Yorkshire, LS1

County: Leeds

Electoral Ward/Division: City and Hunslet

Parish: Non Civil Parish

Built-Up Area: Leeds

Traditional County: Yorkshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): West Yorkshire

Church of England Parish: Leeds City

Church of England Diocese: Leeds

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Description



LEEDS

SE3033NW ALBION STREET
714-1/76/12 (East side)
19/03/70 No.48
Moorlands House

GV II

Formerly known as: No.48 Premises of Leek and Westbourne
Building Society ALBION STREET.
Premises of the Leeds and West Yorkshire Assurance Company,
now offices. 1852-55, altered C20. By WB Gingell, sculptor
Robert Mawer. Richly modelled Venetian palazzo style. Ashlar,
wrought-iron balconies, roof not visible. Square plan, on
corner site with Commercial Street (right return).
2 storeys with attic and basement. 3 bays. Vermiculated
rustication to ground floor with more heavily rusticated
plinth, rusticated round-arch doorway with carved tympanum and
flanking Venetian windows in round-arched recesses with
continuous moulded impost and carved head keyblocks.
Retractable metal shutters to ground-floor windows ran in
tracks behind the piers to each window arch. Heavy dentilled
cornice over ground floor with projecting balconies to
1st-floor windows. First floor: giant paired Corinthian
three-quarter columns supporting heavy entablature with
festoons and masks in the frieze, the entablature breaks
forward over the columns. The 1st floor has 3 tall windows
with segmental pediments on console brackets. 3 attic windows
above with paired pilasters between, cornice and balustered
parapet with urns. Left and right returns similar but single
(not paired) columns on first floor.
INTERIOR: good quality contemporary interiors including
Classical plaster doorcases, pilasters and moulded
entablature.
HISTORICAL NOTE: W Bruce Gingell was the chief commercial
architect in Bristol, responsible for banks, warehouses in the
massive 'High Victorian' manner. Millstone grit from 3
different quarries was used in the construction: Bramley Fall
for the heavily vermiculated plinth, Pool Bank for the finely
rusticated ground floor and Venetian windows, and Rawdon Hill
for the 2 upper storeys, columns, entablature and pedimented
window heads. This building predates Gingell's Bristol work
and is one of the first of the new-style commercial buildings
in Leeds; it is noteworthy that it pre-dates the Town Hall.
(Linstrum, D: West Yorkshire Architects and Architecture:
1978-: 20; The Builder, 10 July 1858: 466-467).


Listing NGR: SE3007133556

External Links

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