Stanley Dock Tobacco Warehouse

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Stanley Dock Tobacco Warehouse
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General information
Town or city Liverpool
Country  England
Construction started 1900
Completed 1901
Client Mersey Docks Estates
Height 125 ft (38 m)
Technical details
Size 36 acres (15 ha)
Design and construction
Architect A.G. Lyster

The Stanley Dock Tobacco Warehouse is a grade II listed building and is the world's largest brick warehouse.[1][2][3] It is adjacent to the Stanley Dock, in Liverpool, England. Standing 125 feet (38 m) high, the building was, at the time of its construction in 1901, claimed to be the world's largest building in terms of area.[2][4][5] The 14 storey building spans across 36 acres (15 ha) and its construction used 27 million bricks, 30,000 panes of glass and 8,000 tons of steel.[1][5]

The overall design is by A. G. Lyster, the Dock Engineer, but Arthur Berrington almost certainly played a part. The warehouse was a late addition to the Stanley Dock complex and was built on land reclaimed from the dock. Stanley Dock is accessible from the dock system or by barge from the Leeds and Liverpool Canal which enters under Great Howard Street bridge.

With the decline of trade going through Liverpool, the warehouse fell into disuse in the 1980s and gradually into disrepair. More recently the building has featured in the Stop the Rot conservation campaign by the Liverpool Echo newspaper. Part of the ground floor of the warehouse was used for the Sunday Heritage Market. In 2010 local club promoter Sean Weaver held a warehouse rave on Boxing Day, which saw 2,500 people descend on the building. Acts included DJ Rolando, Kids In Glass Houses lead singer Aled Phillips, Hatcha and Chrispy, as well as a plethora of local DJs from the area.[6]

Various plans have been unveiled for the Tobacco Warehouse to be redeveloped into several hundred apartments as part of a larger development of the whole Stanley Dock site. The plans involve hollowing out the centre of the warehouse to create a garden-filled courtyard.[7][8][9]

In 2014 the Irish company who had previously transformed Belfast's Titanic Quarter, Harcourt Development, put forward a proposal for the warehouse to be converted into 476 apartments accompanied by businesses, cafes and retail outlets on the ground floor.[10]

References

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External links