![]() |
| Leeds Kirkgate Market |
Continuing my British Listed Buildings Photo Challenge for Leeds, having walked from City Square to Briggate, where at Queens Court I had encountered one of the many yards that had developed on the sites of old burgage plots, I continued down Lower Briggate to Swinegate.
Here, the premises of Charles Walker and Co. Ltd. - established in 1887 and described as mill furnishers - caught my eye. It is built in red brick with sandstone dressings and has a clock that was installed in 1935 by the renowned Leeds based clock maker, Charles H. Potts and Co. Ltd.
Surprisingly, along with the neighbouring former regional headquarters of Leeds City Tramways (1915), now the Malmaison hotel, it is not a listed building. Both of these buildings are survivors in a city where much of its industrial heritage has been swept away, with it being replaced with soulless towers and massive blocks of apartments that overshadow its historic buildings.
![]() |
| A detail of the former regional headquarters of Leeds City Tramways |
Returning to Call Lane, I continued up to No. 48, a rendered brick mid C18 house that later included a warehouse, which extends westwards for a distance of approximately 34m along the passage to Queen’s Court on its south side and has an open yard to the north.
While photographing its south elevation, I discovered the east ends of the north and south ranges of Queen’s Court and, after taking a few photos of these brick buildings that are Grade II listed mainly for their historical significance rather than their architectural merit, I continued up Call Lane until I reached Hirsts Yard.
Next on my Photo Challenge was the early C19 Nos. 11-13 Hirsts Yard, which are just one of a series of two storied brick workshops that run alongside the yard. Historic England (HE) describe them as a “Rare survival of the type of warehousing and workshops built within the confines of yards to rear of the important market street frontage of Briggate in the C18 and C19, but very many are now used as bars and nightclubs.
Returning to Call Lane and continuing up to the junction with Duncan Street and Cloth Hall Street, although not part of my Photo Challenge, I stopped to take a single photograph of the magnificent Grade I listed Corn Exchange (1863) This was designed by Cuthbert Broderick – the architect of Leeds Town Hall (1853-1858) – and built with the coarse grained and frequently pebbly Rough Rock, which has been used at Kirkstall Abbey and in many of the historic buildings in Leeds since.
As mentioned in my previous post, although the principal public buildings are built with the locally quarried Upper Carboniferous gritstone and sandstone, such as the Rough Rock and Elland Flags – with others brought in to Leeds by the well established railway network – brick and terracotta have been used in very many of the finest buildings in Leeds.
No. 22 New Market Street (c.1900), also known as Dackawell House, is a shop and offices built using a brick clad steel frame, which HE suggests may be by S.E. Smith and J. Tweedale but they also refer to “Percy Robinson's corner building, Nos. 2 & 4 Duncan Street, 1904 (qv). No. 26 Lands Lane is similar in design, single bay (qv)”.
Nos. 14-34 Central Road (c.1900) is a block of shops, workshops and offices that is built in a Queen Anne Revival style. The materials used are dark red wirecut bricks, typical of those made from Coal Measures shales and mudstones. For the window arches and jambs a brighter coloured brick is used, which reminds me of the red rubber bricks used in the south of England.
At ground floor level, the original shop fronts are separated by giant pilasters with maroon faience tiles, which have brackets surmounted by obelisks between the first floor windows. Burmantofts of Leeds were a renowned manufacturer of architectural faience at this time and it is therefore very probable that they were the suppliers of these.
Stopping briefly to take a couple of photos of the south end of the Grade I listed Leeds Kirkgate Market (1904), which was designed by John and Joseph Leeming and, according to the Building Stones Heritage of Leeds, is built in Eccleshill stone from the Elland Flags near Bradford.
Continuing to Crown Street to photograph the late C18 Nos. 5 and 7, which is of no interest to this Language of Stone Blog, the remains of the Grade II* listed former White Cloth Hall provides evidence of the importance of woollen cloth in the prosperity of Leeds and, retracing my step to Kirkgate, the former First White Cloth Hall (1711) is a further example.
![]() |
| The former First White Cloth Hall |










































