Old Town Hall, Gateshead


The Old Town Hall is a municipal building in the West Street, Gateshead, England.

History

The first town hall in Gateshead was in Bush Yard. The council subsequently established itself in a building in Greenesfield in 1844. The foundation stone for the current building was laid in 1868: a stand collapsed during the ceremony killing a member of the public. The current building was designed in the Italianate style by John Johnstone who had also designed Newcastle Town Hall. Construction work on the Gateshead building was delayed after preparatory work penetrated a coal seam leading to the collapse of nearby properties and the building was eventually completed in 1870.
The old town hall also served as a magistrates' court and a police station. In 1892 an ornamental clock, which is Grade II listed and stands in front of the town hall, was presented to Gateshead by the mayor, Walter de Lancey Willson, on the occasion of him being elected for a third time. He was also one of the founders of Walter Willson's, a chain of grocers in the North East and Cumbria. Queen Elizabeth II, accompanied by the Duke of Edinburgh, visited the town hall on 29 October 1954.
The building remained the headquarters of the Metropolitan Borough of Gateshead until the council moved to Gateshead Civic Centre in Regent Street in 1987. The town hall was occupied by the Microelectronics Applications Research Institute who established their head office in the building from 1987 to 2001. It was then briefly used by the management of Sage Gateshead while they waited for their new building at Gateshead Quays to be competed in December 2004.
The Tyneside Cinema occupied the town hall under a short term lease while a restoration and renovation project was undertaken on their premises in Newcastle upon Tyne between November 2006 and May 2008. The main performance hall in the old town hall was refurbished in 2009 and the building was managed by Sage Gateshead from January 2013. In 2018 it was acquired by "Dinosauria" which has announced plans to convert it into an "unnatural history museum".