Town Hall work begins
Published Date:
03 October 2008
Work has begun on improving the look of one of Wigan's most iconic buildings.
Over the next 12 weeks specialist contractors will carry out repairs to the distinctive red terracotta facade of Wigan Town Hall.
Initial work has already started on the Hewlett Street side and will move to Library Street from November 3.
The council says disruption will be kept to a minimum and access should be maintained at all times.
The listed building, which dates back to 1903, was recently surveyed and some of the terracotta was found to be in urgent need of repair to prevent pieces from "spalling," or breaking away.
A council spokesman said: "The Town Hall's terracotta facades are what gives the building its distinctiveness. The survey showed that in some places there is a danger that pieces could come away and potentially be a hazard to passers-by.
"While the contractors are doing the urgent repairs they will also assess the condition of the remainder of the terracotta work."
The work is being done in partnership with NPS (Wigan) and specialist contractors Maysand.
Wigan Town hall owes its origin to the town's once dominant coal industry and, unlike other northern town halls, it was not originally built for council use.
Opened by the Countess of Crawford (of Haigh Hall fame) 105 years ago, it provided a new home for the expanding Wigan Mining and Technical College. The college developed out of the Wigan Mechanics Institute and by the turn of the century it was regarded as one of Britain's top places for training mining engineers.
But as the nation's pits dwindled, the demand for specialist engineers reduced and other departments of the expanding technical college moved in.
By the end of the 1980s, Wigan College of Technology needed larger premises. At the same time the council was looking for more offices and following a complex series of moves Wigan's "new" town hall opened in 1990.
It received the royal seal of approval in November 1991, when excited crowds lined Library Street to greet the late Diana, Princess of Wales.
The full article contains 350 words and appears in Wigan Evening Post newspaper.
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Last Updated:
03 October 2008 5:35 PM
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Source:
Wigan Evening Post
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Location:
Wigan