Ellesmere Port Council Offices Explained

Ellesmere Port Council Offices
Coordinates:53.2768°N -2.9041°W
Location:Civic Way, Ellesmere Port
Built:1969
Architecture:Modern style

Ellesmere Port Council Offices is a municipal building in Civic Way in Ellesmere Port, a town in Cheshire, in England. The building served as the headquarters of Ellesmere Port and Neston Borough Council but is now disused.

History

Following significant population growth, largely associated with the shipping industry, a local board of health was established in the area in 1872.[1] The local board of health was replaced by Wirral Rural District Council in 1894 and by Ellesmere Port and Whitby Urban District Council in 1902.[2] The new council initially established offices at Bank Buildings in Station Street,[3] before opening dedicated offices in 1908.[4] [5] The council then moved to the former home of the Grace family, Whitby Hall, in 1931.[6]

After the Second World War, a memorial, in the form of an irregular monolith of stone bearing by a plaque commemorating the lives of veterans involved in the Normandy landings, was unveiled to the west of the council offices at the corner of Stanney Lane and Whitby Road.[7] [8]

The area became a municipal borough in 1955 and, in that context, the council found that the Whitby Hall was inadequate and decided to commission a new civic complex. The site they selected was open land on the north side of Stanney Lane.[9] The council offices were the final phase of the development of the new civic complex in the new town centre, following the opening of the Civic Hall in 1955, and a library in 1962.[10] The new five-storey building was designed under the supervision of the borough engineer and surveyor, Howard Wilson,[11] in the modern style, built in concrete, glass and brick and was completed in 1969. The main frontage was faced with alternating bands of concrete cladding and steel-framed glass and there were brick-clad staircase towers at centre and ends of the structure.[12]

The building continued to serve as the local administrative headquarters after the area became part of the new Borough of Ellesmere Port and Neston in 1974.[13] However, council meetings continued to be held at Whitby Hall until the early 1990s, when the council offices were extended. The additions including a new hexagonal shaped structure, containing a purpose-built council chamber, and an underground bunker, intended for use in the event of a nuclear attack.[14] In 2009, the borough became part of Cheshire West and Chester.[15]

In 2005, a new civic square was established to the east of the council offices. The centrepiece of the civic square was a new war memorial, in the form of a celtic cross on a cruciform base commemorating the lives of all local service personnel who had died in military conflict, which was unveiled on 11 November 2005.[16] [17]

The new council continued to use the building to deliver services until May 2022, when it moved to a new building in the town, The Portal.[18] Demolition of the building was approved, but was delayed until 2024 due to the need to relocate mobile phone masts from the roof.[19] [20] [21]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Wirral Rural District Council records. Cheshire Archives. 23 March 2024.
  2. Web site: Ellesmere Port and Whitby UD. Vision of Britain. 23 March 2024.
  3. Book: Stone, materials and stores. The Builder. 241. 23 February 1907.
  4. Book: Ellesmere Port The Making of an Industrial Borough . P. J. . Aspinall. Daphne M. . Hudson. 1982 . Borough Council of Port Ellesmere and Neston, South Wirral. 978-0950766607 . 45. In 1908, the year in which new council offices were built, Ellesmere Port….
  5. Book: Tenders open. Roads and Road Construction . 38 . 1960. 44. Contract documents from the borough engineer and surveyor, Queen Street, Ellesmere Port.
  6. Web site: Ellesmere Port: Whitby Hall Municipal Offices. Cheshire Image Bank. 23 March 2024.
  7. News: Ellesmere Port (Normandy Veterans Stone of Remembrance). War Memorials Online. 23 March 2024.
  8. Web site: Normandy Veterans. Imperial War Museum. 23 March 2024.
  9. Web site: Ordnance Survey Map. 1955. 23 March 2024.
  10. News: Phase two finished . Municipal Journal . 1962.
  11. Book: Appointments. Municipal Journal . 80. 1972 . 106. Ellesmere Port BC, has been appointed borough engineer and surveyor in succession to Howard Wilson.
  12. News: Borough of Ellesmere Port . 6 September 2022 . Cheshire Observer . 12 December 1969 . Chester . 11 . ...at the new Municipal Offices, 4 Civic Way, Ellesmere Port....
  13. Book: Local Government Act 1972. 1972 c.70. The Stationery Office Ltd. 0-10-547072-4. 1997.
  14. News: So that's what it looks like inside... . 6 September 2022 . Ellesmere Port Pioneer . 29 January 1992 . 18.
  15. Web site: The Cheshire (Structural Changes) Order 2008 - Article 4. www.legislation.gov.uk. Legislation.gov.uk. 15 January 2009. https://web.archive.org/web/20110103195800/http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2008/634/article/4/made. 3 January 2011. live. dmy-all.
  16. Web site: Ellesmere Port War Memorial Project. Royden History. 23 March 2024.
  17. Web site: War Memorial, Ellesmere Port Civic Centre. Carl's Cam. 23 March 2024.
  18. News: Porter . Gary . New Cheshire West and Chester Council HQ in Ellesmere Port to open in May . 23 March 2024 . Cheshire Live . 5 April 2022.
  19. News: Porter . Gary . Fresh plans to knock down Ellesmere Port council offices with underground bunker . 23 March 2024 . Cheshire Live . 23 August 2023.
  20. News: Dowling . Mark . Bid to level Ellesmere Port ex-CWaC offices and bunker approved . 23 March 2024 . Chester Standard . 16 February 2024.
  21. News: Porter . Gary . Go-ahead for new plans to bulldoze Ellesmere Port council offices with underground bunker . 23 March 2024 . Cheshire Live . 18 February 2024.