This is the former Congregational Church which has now been eclipsed by the high blocks of offices and apartments which surround it.
The Congregational Church, 2023 |
Its spire rose upwards unchallenged by other buildings and always made me think it had a fine history.
My Pevsner tell me that it was built in "1858 by Edward Walters, Brick with stone dressing, a design of interpenetrating temple fronts with a tall slender Campanile attached to the s…..The Veneto-Byzantine style campanile has blind arcading to the first stage, with stone arcaded belfry stage and steep concave roof with lucarnes. It was converted to recording studios in the 1980s and the basement is used as a café bar”.*
Since the Pevsner entry was written the owner of the studios, Pete Waterman sold it in 2006 and it is now a set of offices.
Glimpsed from Deansgate, 2023 |
Over the years I have photographed it from the road coming into the city centre, from the old canal side and from the platform of the Deansgate Castlefield tram stop.
Lost among the tower blocks, 2023 |
These include Little Peter Street, Commercial Street and Hewitt Street.
And it is from Hewitt Street that I got the shot, with the railway bridge to my right and I rather like it.
That said this last image is the one most of us see and record.
The elegant church tower looks just an after thought set against the commercial skyline of the 21st century
Location; Hewitt Street and Deansgate
Picture; Sneaking up on the Congregational Church from Hewitt Street, 2023, from the collection of Andrew Simpson
*Manchester, Hartwell Clare, Pevsner Architectural Guides, 2001
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