Albert Dock Traffic Office Explained

Albert Dock Traffic Office
Location Town:Liverpool
Location Country:England
Completion Date:1847
Architect:Philip Hardwick
Jesse Hartley

The Albert Dock Traffic Office is a 19th-century Grade I listed building located in Liverpool, England. As part of a series of other buildings it makes up part of the Albert Dock. Formally the former home of Granada Television the building is now owned by National Museums Liverpool.

In 2021 it was announced the building would be renamed to the Dr Martin Luther King Jr Building.[1]

History

Completed in 1847 by architect Philip Hardwick the building was initially designed for use within the then newly built Albert Dock which had opened just a year prior. Failing profitability of the dock resulted in its closure post World War Two however a regeneration scheme during the 1980s saw the complex refurbished and occupied by Granada Television. After Granada relocated to neighbouring Manchester the building used briefly used by television show This Morning before buying sold on as part of a cost-cutting measure.[2]

In 2008[3] the building was sold to the International Slavery Museum and now display some of the museum's exhibitions.[4]

Architecture

Set across three stories; the third of which added a year after it completion, the building is of red brick with 5 x 7 bay windows. The buildings façade features a Tuscan portico and frieze with four columns constructed of cast iron.[5]

References

53.4015°N -2.9921°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Fulcher. Merlin. 28 January 2021. Major contest planned for Liverpool's museums quarter. 19 February 2021.
  2. Book: Collard, Ian. Liverpool in 50 Buildings. Amberley Publishing. 2016. 9781445658964. 8–9.
  3. Web site: Museums of the People, by the People, for the People. 19 February 2021. Museum ID. 7 October 2017.
  4. Web site: Sold to National Museums Liverpool! The Dock Traffic Office. 19 February 2021. National Museums Liverpool.
  5. Web site: Albert Dock Traffic Office. 19 February 2021. Historic England.