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Bank of England Building, Liverpool
53°24′22″N 2°59′26″W / 53.4062°N 2.9905°W
The Bank of England Building is a Grade I listed building located on Castle Street, Liverpool, England.
The Bank of England first decided to open premises on Castle Street, Liverpool in 1826, which helped establish the area as the city's financial centre.
The present building was designed by Charles Robert Cockerell and built in a Neoclassical style between 1845 and 1848. The building was one of three provincial branches he designed for the Bank of England in the mid-19th century.
The building was used entirely by the bank and did not contain any lettable space to other businesses, which were fast being established in the district. Subsequently, Cockerell built a similar building in Cook Street for this purpose. It was demolished in 1959.
The building was used by the Bank of England until 1987. In the 1990s, TSB used the building for a few years before it lay empty. In 2015, homeless activists occupied the building for two weeks before being evicted by police. During the occupation, the activists caused an estimated £46,000 worth of damage to the building.
The Ivy restaurant group opened a brasserie in the building in November 2024.
The building combines several neoclassical architectural styles, including Greek, Roman and Renaissance. The most evident of these is Greek, with four Doric style columns 'tying' the ground and first floors together. The building itself is raised up from ground level, sitting atop a rough granite plinth.
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Bank of England Building, Liverpool AI simulator
(@Bank of England Building, Liverpool_simulator)
Bank of England Building, Liverpool
53°24′22″N 2°59′26″W / 53.4062°N 2.9905°W
The Bank of England Building is a Grade I listed building located on Castle Street, Liverpool, England.
The Bank of England first decided to open premises on Castle Street, Liverpool in 1826, which helped establish the area as the city's financial centre.
The present building was designed by Charles Robert Cockerell and built in a Neoclassical style between 1845 and 1848. The building was one of three provincial branches he designed for the Bank of England in the mid-19th century.
The building was used entirely by the bank and did not contain any lettable space to other businesses, which were fast being established in the district. Subsequently, Cockerell built a similar building in Cook Street for this purpose. It was demolished in 1959.
The building was used by the Bank of England until 1987. In the 1990s, TSB used the building for a few years before it lay empty. In 2015, homeless activists occupied the building for two weeks before being evicted by police. During the occupation, the activists caused an estimated £46,000 worth of damage to the building.
The Ivy restaurant group opened a brasserie in the building in November 2024.
The building combines several neoclassical architectural styles, including Greek, Roman and Renaissance. The most evident of these is Greek, with four Doric style columns 'tying' the ground and first floors together. The building itself is raised up from ground level, sitting atop a rough granite plinth.