Sunday, 15 February 2026

Whitehall Bridge to City Square in Leeds

 
A view west along the River Aire

It took me 1¾ hours to explore Granary Wharf and Holbeck Urban Village and take photographs of the 19 buildings for my British Listed Buildings Photo Challenge. With 28 more buildings to photograph on my day out, I quickly headed west along the towpath of the Leeds and Liverpool Canal until I reached Whitehall Bridge on the River Aire. 
 
Whitehall Bridge
 
This is a part of Leeds that I had never been to before and, like the part of Holbeck that I had just explored, the 1908 Ordnance Survey (OS) map shows that Whitehall cloth mills, Whitehall soap works, an electric lighting works and a coal depot occupied most of the north bank of the river. To the north of these, Leeds Central Station and its associated railway sidings, goods sheds and warehouses stretched to Wellington Street. 
 
The 1908 OS map showing the area around the River Aire

The waterside industrial buildings have since been replaced by the Whitehall Riverside community, a mixed-use C21 development comprising multi-storey office and apartment blocks, hotels, bars and cafes, car parks and grassed areas. 

A view of the Whitehall Riverside development from Whitehall Bridge
 
Walking along the riverside path, I kept my eyes open for interesting examples of urban landscaping or public sculpture, but all I could see were architecturally uninspiring blocks built mainly of concrete and glass and I wasn’t tempted for a moment to explore the area. 
 
The River Aire as it it passes under Leeds railway station
 
Reaching the east end of the path, an old retaining wall that now supports a car park is built with what looks like another example of very coarse grained Rough Rock, but I was more interested in the fact that the River Aire turns at right angles to the south, before continuing through four parallel arches over a distance of 155 m and reappearing beneath the southern entrance to Leeds railway station at Granary Wharf. 
 
The River Aire passing under Leeds railway station

Known locally as the Dark Arches, more than 18 million bricks were used to build what was one of the largest man-made underground spaces in Britain when it opened in 1869, with the railway engineers Thomas Eliot Harrison and Robert Hodgson being responsible for its design. 
 
The concourse at Leeds railway station
 
The concourse and adjoining Queens Hotel and the offices of the London, Midland and Scottish Railway Company (LMSRC) to the British Listed Buildings website are underlain by more extensive vaults, which date to the construction of the Wellington Street Station (1846) and include the culvert for the Mill Goit.
 
The rear elevations of the office of the LMSRC and the Queens Hotel
 
Although the rear of the steel framed hotel and offices and the concourse are mainly built with red/brown brick with Portland limestone dressings, the latter is used to clad the City Square frontages. During my many visits to Leeds using the train, I had been too preoccupied in catching a bus to an outlying part of the city or a train back to Sheffield to look closely at these buildings. 
 
The Portland stone clad buildings fronting Leeds railway station
 
All three buildings were part of a single phase of construction, from 1931 to 1936, with designs by William Henry Hamlyn - the architect for the LMSRC - and William Curtis Green, best known for his work on the Dorchester Hotel in London, acting as a consultant.
 
The LMSRC crest above the entrance to the concourse
 
Historic England describe the 17-bay Queens Hotel, which has 8 storeys with 2 mezzanines and an attic, as being in a stripped Classical style and the only sculptural detail that I noticed was the coat of arms above the entrance to the concourse and the carved crest with roses and thistles above the door to the LMSRC office on Aire Street.
 
The LMSRC crest above the Aire Street entrance to the office
 

Friday, 13 February 2026

Holbeck Urban Village in Leeds

 
Egyptian Revival style detailing on the offices at the Temple Works

Entering Holbeck Conservation Area, having briefly examined the buildings stones used for the locks, retaining wall, Bridge 226 and the former Canal Company Office at Granary Wharf – which are Rough Rock, Elland Flags and possibly White Mansfield stone – previous research using Google Street View informed me that the principal building material seen here would be red brick. 
 
Tower Works on the 1908 Ordnance Survey map
 
Tower Works was built for Thomas Richards Harding in 1866, as a factory producing pins for wool, flax, cotton and silk combing and for carding cloth, with his son Colonel Thomas Walter Harding - a mayor of Leeds and a notable philanthropist – extending it considerably in 1899. 
 
The chimneys at Tower Works

The factory operated until 1981 and much of it was demolished and a new development comprising massive multi-storey apartment blocks replacing it, although the Grade II* listed Verona Tower (1864) and Giotto Tower (1899), have been retained along with the Grade II listed Little Chimney (1920), the Engine House (1899) and the Entrance Range (1866). 
 
A detail of the Verona Tower
 
The Verona Tower, by Thomas Shaw, is built with polychrome bricks with gritstone bracketed sills and cornices and its Italianate style is based on the Lamberti Tower in Verona. The Giotto Tower by William Bakewell makes extensive use of Burmantofts terracotta and its design is based on the campanile at Florence Cathedral, begun by Giotto in 1334. 
 
A detail of the Giotto Tower

Apart from the Italianate towers exhibiting fine craftsmanship and materials, which was popular in industrial buildings of the Victorian period, the Giotto Tower functioned as a dust extraction chimney, which was very advanced for its time. Although they have been saved from demolition, they are completely dwarfed and largely obscured by the surrounding apartment blocks, which possess very little architectural merit. 
 
The entrance range at Tower Works
 
After photographing the rear of the Globe Iron Foundry fitting up shop, which has no interest to this Language of Stone Blog, I made my way to Globe Road where I took a few photos of the Entrance Range, which according to Historic England (HE) was also probably designed by Thomas Shaw. 
 
The carriage entrance at Tower Works

Very coarse grained Rough Rock is used for the rusticated round arched carriage entrance, which has a keystone, pilasters supporting the entablature and a modillion cornice – with a rock-faced plinth, voussoirs to the windows, string courses and pyramidal dentils used for decoration to the adjoining red brick walls. 
 
A massive block of Rough Rock used for the base of a pair of pilasters
 
Taking note of the variation of the colours and textures in the paving stones, which I thought was quite unusual and reminded me of the sandstone that has recently been used for the steps at the front of Barnsley Town Hall, I continued to Water Lane. 
 
Paving outside the entrance range to Tower Works

Walking alongside the Hol Beck to the Grade II listed cast iron bridge (1849), which replaced the wooden bridge linking John Marshall and Company's flax mill with the newly built warehouse (1808) on the south side, I noted that Rough Rock has been used for its canalisation. 
 
The bridge over Hol Beck
 
On the south side of Water Lane, the 6 industrial buildings on my list to photograph are all built with red/brown brick and none of these are of interest to this Language of Stone Blog and their age, architectural features and historical significance are best described by the HE listings for Nos. 97, 99, 101, 103, 105 and 125 Water Lane. 
 
Various listed industrial buildings at Holbeck Urban Village
 
Similarly, on Foundry Street, Saw Mill Street, Marshall Street and Bath Street, the premises of foundries, machine shops, workshops, warehouses and various mills are brick built and their descriptions can be found in the Leeds and Hunslet section on the British Listed Buildings website. 
 
Listed buildings in and around Holbeck Urban Village

The predominant material for the industrial buildings is brick, but sandstone from the Elland Flags has been used for the boundary walls to Marshall Mills together with gritstone from the Rough Rock, which can also be seen as setts along with pink and grey granite and whinstone. 
 
Boundary walls to Marshall Mills and road setts
 
Although not part of my Photo Challenge, the most interesting building that I saw in Holbeck Urban Village is the office block to the Grade I listed Temple Mill, which was built as a flax spinning mill as part of the Marshall Mills complex, which originated on the north side of Hol Beck. 
 
The office building at Temple Mill
 
The mill was built 1838-1840 and the office added 1840-1843, with both being designed in the Egyptian Revival style by the English architect Ignatius Bonomi, who modelled them on the Temple of Edfu, Coarse grained and often pebbly gritstone from the Rough Rock has been used in its construction, but finer grained beds have been probably been selected to enable carving of the fine details of the capitals and deep coving.
 
A capital on the Temple Mill office building
 

Wednesday, 11 February 2026

Granary Wharf in Leeds

 
A plaque for the Leeds Waterfront Heritage Trail

Following on from my day out to Winster, which had involved a total of 7 bus journeys as with a previous trip to Birchover and Stanton-in-Peak, I next took the train to Leeds – firstly to explore the old industrial area of Holbeck, which the 1908 Ordnance Survey (OS) map shows as occupied by textile mills, clothing factories, engineering works and back to back houses for the workers. 
 
The 1908 OS map of Holbeck

For as many years as I can remember, as the train loops around this area on the approach to Leeds station, it consisted mainly of derelict brick built industrial buildings and warehouses, with large open spaces where they have been demolished. In recent years, regeneration has been rapidly taking place with the industrial buildings and old housing being replaced with large apartment blocks, offices and industrial units in an area now known as the Temple District. 
 
Having never visited this part of Leeds before, I entered a post code for the British Listed Buildings Photo Challenge and, noting that there was a cluster of buildings around Granary Wharf on the Leeds and Liverpool and Leeds Canal and the Holbeck Urban Village – in an area dominated by very uninspiring modern architecture - I decided to have a quick look around before further exploring the area to the west of Park Row. 
 
My Photo Challenge for Holbeck Urban Village

Leaving Leeds station by the rear exit to Granary Wharf, where I had caught a Water Taxi when preparing a Sheffield U3A Geology Group field trip to look at the building stones of Leeds in 2019, I stopped to photograph the Lock No. 1 and the Grade II* listed former Leeds and Liverpool Company warehouse (c.1776) beyond the River Lock. 
 
Lock No. 1 and the Leeds and Liverpool Company warehouse
 
Making my way past the Double Tree Hotel, the Grade II listed mid C19 crane is surrounded by sandstone paving that looks like it has been laid as part of the recent development, but the original setts at the edge of the dock have been retained. 
 
Paving and setts outside the Double Tree Hotel
 
I didn’t closely examine the sandstone used for the setts but, with this section of the canal being built 1770-1777, the source of the stone for these and the very large blocks of gritstone used for the canal walls is very likely to be the Bramley Fall Quarry in the Rough Rock, which operated next to the River Aire 6 km north-east of Granary Wharf as the crow flies. 
 
Large blocks of Bramley Hall stone
 
The very coarse grained gritstone from the original Bramley Hall Quarry developed a reputation for the size of blocks and the great strength and resistance to weathering, with these being widely used for engineering work. Although stone named Bramley Hall is quarried near Bramhope, the original quarry closed c.1839 and this should be considered as a generic trade name for pebbly gritstone obtained from certain quarries on the Rough Rock. 
 
Bridge 226
 
Continuing west along the canal side, Bridge 226 was built 1770-1777 for road traffic, with vermiculated rustication decorating its voussoirs and buttresses, but Historic England (HE) suggest that the parapets with plain incised panels were rebuilt c.1819. 
 
A detail of quartz pebbles in the Rough Rock (21 mm diameter coin)
 
Getting very close to the east elevation of the bridge, beds of large quartz pebbles can be seen in the very coarse Rough Rock and, as explained by Bill Fraser of the Leeds Geological Association during a Sheffield U3A Geology Group field trip to Roundhay Park, these were formed at the base of a large river channel. This formed a part of the vast deltaic system in which the very coarse grained sandstones of the Millstone Grit Group were deposited. 
 
A quartz pebble in vermiculated masonry (21 mm diameter coin)
 
The retaining wall next to the tow path is built with sandstone that has a completely different character to the Rough Rock, although occasional blocks of the latter are incorporated into it Its yellowish colour, relatively fine grain size and well defined plane bedding immediately made me think of the very many examples of the Elland Flags, from the Pennine Lower Coal Measures Formation, which I had seen when exploring Headingley and Headingley Hill a few weeks earlier. 
 
Elland Flags sandstone used in the retaining wall

The Basin Lock to the west of Bridge 226 was also built 1770-1777 and the very massive blocks used for its walls are presumably further examples of the Rough Rock from the Bramley Fall Quarry, but I just took a few general photographs of it. 
 
Basin Lock
 
Crossing over the bridge, the former Canal Company Office is considered by HE to have been erected after the completion of the canal in 1816 and is built with a pale buff coloured stone that looks quite different to the Rough Rock and the Elland Flags. 
 
The Canal Company Office

I couldn’t get near enough to examine it with my hand lens, but I haven't seen this pattern of differential weathering of fine grained beds in any Upper Carboniferous sandstone and it reminds me of the ‘old leather texture’ of weathered White Mansfield stone - a variety of the Permian Cadeby Formation that is classified as a dolomitic sandstone.

A detail of weathered stone

In 1819, the horse drawn Mansfield to Pinxton railway first connected to the Cromford Canal, which was opened in 1794 to link with the River Trent, and it is theoretically possible that White Mansfield stone could have been brought along the canal network to Leeds, but this would be very unusual given the abundance of good quality local stone and it needs further investigation when I next visit Leeds. 
 
The south elevation of the Canal Company Office

Sunday, 8 February 2026

Main Street in Winster - Part 2

 
A detail of Tomkins Cottage

Since alighting from the No. 172 bus in Winster outside Winster Hall, it had taken an hour and forty five minutes to walk just less than 1.9 km back to my starting point on Main Street and I had photographed 42 of the 53 listed buildings for my British Listed Buildings Photo Challenge. 
 
A circular walk around Winster starting at Winster Hall
 
Next on my list was the early C18 Denver House, built in reddened gritstone and squeezed into a narrow plot, with its gable end fronting the street and still retaining its shop window, but I just took  a few general photos from the opposite side of the road and didn’t look closely at it.
 
Denver House
 
The late C18 Old Brewhouse, which is listed for its group value only, is described by Historic England (HE) as being built with course gritstone rubble, but it looks to me like the walling is mainly dolomitised Carboniferous Limestone with a few isolated blocks of reddened gritstone, which is also used for the dressings. 

The Old Brewhouse

The HE description, which was originally dated 12th July 1967 with a minor amendment on 15th February 2013, refers to C20 top hung shop windows on the ground floor, but these have since been replaced with sash windows to match those on the upper storeys and their window jambs and the head of the right hand window have been replaced. 
 
Stanfree House (R) and Keystone House (L)
 
Buff and reddened gritstone is certainly used for the adjacent pair of late C18 cottages, named by HE as Stanfree House and Adjoining House, with the latter since given the name Keystone House, which relects the keystone in the door surround that looks like a later alteration. 
 
Moot House

Moot House and The Cottage is descibed by HE as a terrace of three houses that was originally a single house, which they date as mid C18 with C19 alterations and refer to "single early C19 bow shop front, C20 bow window and C19 glazed double doors to west end", but this doesn't correspond with its current appearance. 
 
Tompkins Cottage
 
On the village website, it is mentioned that the numbering the houses is inconsistent and an address map has been devised, which shows that Moot House is identified by its green painted woodwork and The Cottage, renamed Tomkins Cottage, immediately to the east of it – with its former use as a wholesale and retail dealer in small wares being recorded by the painted lettering on the door lintel.
 
The west and south elevation of the Winster shop
 
Across the road is the building decribed as Woodhays, which was formerly built as a house in the mid C18, with subsequent alterations, but which is now the community owned village shop. The gable end facing Main Street is built with rock-faced reddened gritatone with the west elevation bult with a mixture of cream coloured dolomitised limestone, grey unaltered limestone and occasional blocks of gritstone. 
 
The north and east elevations of the Winster shop
 
The east elevation is built with a similar mixture of cream and grey limestones for the walling and gritstone for the dressings, which include band courses that form a continuation of the sills and heads to the windows – some of which are blocked up – with massive stones used for the lintels and surrounds to the central doorway and the former doorway on the first floor. 
 
The Old Bakehouse
 
Taking a diversion down Woodhouse Lane, the C17 Old Bakehouse has some C18 alterations and is built with coursed limestone rubble walling that contains a few blocks of gritstone, with the latter being used for the dressings and Welsh slate for the roof. 
 
Nos. 2 and 3 Woodhouse Lane

Nos. 2 and 3 Woodhouse Lane are another pair of C18 cottages that possess no great architectural merit, but they are listed for their group value and the same materials are used, with the exception that No. 3 is roofed with plain tiles. 
 
Inglenook
 
The adjoining Inglenook comprises two single-bay early C18 cottages, built with coursed limestone rubble walling with some gritstone, which have been converted into one house with the doorway to the south cottage being blocked up with gritstone. 
 
Woodhays
 
Making my way back towards Main Street, I turned left into a yard where there is an unlisted cottage that is also named Woodhays, which makes me wonder if the the village shop has not been correctly named, and nestled in the corner is Rosedene.  
 
Rosedene
 
Yet another example of a mid C18 cottage, it is again built with a mixture of limestone rubble and roughly squared and coarsed gritstone for the walling and massive gritstone for the quoins and dressings, with its roof retaining its original stone slates, but it is again listed for its group value. 
 
The house to the north of Dene Croft
 
At right angles to Rosedene is the C18 House to the North of and Adjoining Dene Croft, which yet again has a mixture of dolomitised and unaltered limestone mixed with gritstone for the walling. Its most prominent feature is the use of very large blocks of massive gritstone for the quoins and for the surrounds to the entrance doorway and the carriage entrance. 
 
Dene Croft
 
Returning to Main Street, the last building on my Photo Challenge was Dene Court, another substantial reddened gritstone mid C17 house that has retained its stone slate roof. As with just about every other listed building that I seen in Winster, the extremely dull HE description provides no insight into the history of this very interesting village, which thrived on lead mining. 
 
The Main Street elevation of Dene Croft

Being conscious that I was now encroaching on private land, I took a very quick look at its east elevation, where the adjoining yard is floored with very irregularly sized paving and very large setts, which were probably quarried from the Corbar Grit. 
 
The east elevation of Dene Croft

With 18 minutes left before my bus arrived, I had a good chat about the local geology and lead mining history with someone who was manning the marquee outside the Market House, before returning to the Winster Hall bus stop where I met the Sheffield U3A Bus Explorers Group
 
The marquee outside the Market House
 
They informed me that they had caught the X17 bus from Sheffield to Matlock and then the No. 172 bus to Winster, because their experience was that the No. 218 TM Travel bus between Sheffiled and Bakewell, which I had used in the morning, was very unreliable.
 
The bus stop outside Winster Hall on Main Street