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Town Hall

Before 1715 the day to day affairs of the borough took place either at the Tolhouse (which still stands beside the library), or at the Guildhall (which stood near the parish church). The first town Hall on the current site was Georgian. Built in 1715 at a cost of £880, its main, very imposing entrance faced onto the river and South Quay. It was demolished in 1870 when the site was cleared for the present Town Hall.

town hall then

Mayor Charles Aldred laid the large three ton cornerstone on 20 April 1880. Designed by architect JB Pearce, the building is made of red brick facings and red Mansfield stone. It cost £35,764, including fittings, and was formally opened by the Prince of Wales on 31 May 1882.

About four years later, disaster struck when the west front wall started to sink. The sheer weight of the building, so close to the river was too much for the ground to support. There were fears that the whole building would have to be demolished and the western facade, the one facing the river, had to be held up by huge wooden beams. To solve the problem of subsidence, an engineer called Duckham designed a system of wrought iron girders, placed on massive screw piles. By gradually screwing up the piles, the building was raised in 1887. This underpinning ensured its survival. It feels solid enough today, although it does lean a little to one side.

Fast forward more than 100 years and another major project, this time to renew the roof of the 125 year old Town Hall, began in December 2007. Scaffolding and polythene sheeting were erected around the building to allow re-roofing this gave the restoration team means to investigate the full extent of the problem. More structural problems than originally anticipated were found, partly due to harsh weather conditions and previous unsympathetic repairs.

Unfortunately the Town Hall's prime position facing directly onto the river was one of the main reasons for its deterioration. The harsh salt air had badly damaged much of the stonemasonary especially on the west side.

town hall now

The work has taken over a year and as well as the complete re-roof, included replacing decayed brick and stone work, renewing slates and insulating the roof to cut heating bills and emissions.

The project was carried out by M S Oakes and cost in excess of £2 million. The project was funded by English Heritage

The finishing touches were completed in January 2009 when the clock was fully restored by a Norwich clockmaker. The clock is now electronically wound so the porters do not have to do so manually 3 times weekly as in the past.

With the scaffolding down the Town Hall is once again a civic building to be proud of.

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Great Yarmouth Borough Council

Town Hall,
Hall Plain,
Great Yarmouth,
Norfolk,
NR30 2QF

Open: Mon - Fri, 9am - 5pm

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