Continuing my British Listed Buildings Photo Challenge for the west part of the Leeds City Centre Conservation Area, at the end of St. Paul’s Street I turned left onto East Parade, a street that was laid out between 1779 and 1789 but now consists only of C19 and C20 buildings.
The Grade II Listed No. 9 East Parade is designed in an Italianate style and built with sandstone ashlar that has a yellowish colour, which immediately made me think that this could be an example of the massive variety of the Elland Flags, a Pennine Lower Coal Measures Formation sandstone that was very widely used in Leeds.
It is dated by Historic England (HE) as c.1870 but at parapet level, beneath the statue of Britannia and a lion, there is a panel with the lettering Established 1840 and looking at the 1850 and 1891 editions of the 1:500 scale Ordnance Survey (OS) maps, there seems to have been no change to the plan of the building, which would suggest that rebuilding may had taken place.
The adjoining East Parade Chambers (1899), which I had photographed along with No. 9 and No. 17A when preparing the Sheffield U3A Geology Group field trip to Leeds in 2019, are offices built with Burmantofts faience tiles in the Free Renaissance style.
No. 17A (1865), also known as Hepper House, was the auction house, with offices and a saleroom that was designed in a Venetian Gothic style for Hepper and Sons by George Corson, whose textile warehouses I had seen on Wellington Street.
This is included in Walk 3 in the Building Stones Heritage of Leeds (BSHL), which describes that it is built with Elland Flags sandstone from the Harehills Quarry - as recorded in The Builder (1863, p.424) – and is considered to be one of the last examples of locally quarried sandstones, before the railways brought in building stone from further afield.
To the first floor windows, red sandstone voussoirs, which is probably Red Mansfield, alternate with the Carboniferous sandstone and this can be seen in the arch to the porch and associated band courses. The pink Peterhead granite columns to the porch, which have lost their polish - perhaps due to inappropriate cleaning with hydrofluoric acid – are the first recorded use of granite in Leeds.
The intricate stone carvings on the arch to the porch, which include acanthus leaves and other floral patterns, are of the highest quality and still retain very sharp profiles but HE doesn’t make any reference to these fine details.
Crossing over the road to the look at the plinth of office block occupied by SCP, on the corner with South Parade, I was interested to see the rapakivi granite from Finland known as Baltic Brown, which I had previously seen on St. Paul’s Street.
It is found in South Karelia near to the Russian border and formed approximately 1.6 billion years ago in the Mesoproterozoic era. It is characterised by large approximately spherical pink orthoclase feldspar phenocrysts with a mantle of greenish oligoclase feldspar, which form concentric rings and are the result of a slow cooling process.
On the opposite corner is Pearl Chambers (1911), designed by the architect William Bakewell in the Free Gothic Revival style for the Pearl Assurance Company. I just took a couple of general photos, but the BSHL describes it as being one of the first major buildings in Leeds to use Portland stone and that Rubislaw granite from Aberdeen is used for the first floor.
Retracing my steps along East Parade to Greek Street, which is excluded from the Conservation Area, the late Georgian No. 7 is rendered and painted and has no interest to this Language of Stone Blog and I continued to Park Row, which is at the heart of the financial didtrict. I had previously photographed several Grade II listed banks, but I wanted to have another look at Abtech House (1900), which was designed by Edward J. Dodgshun in the Baroque Revival style for the West Riding Union Bank.
The frieze by Joseph Thewlis, who also worked on Kirkgate market, is the finest example of architectural sculpture that I have seen in Leeds and depicts Minerva sitting on an Art Nouveau throne, which is flanked by figures representing shipping interests in Africa and investment in the American railways.
Above the entrances, according to the Pevsner Architectural Guide to Leeds by Susan Wrathmell, 'trade' and 'commerce' are personified by male and female figures representing peace and justice and purity and plenty.
The BSHL describes the medium grained sandstone as being Crosland Hill stone from the Rough Rock in Huddersfield, with a deep red Swedish granite that has purplish opalescence in the quartz grains used for the ground floor and the Emerald Pearl variety of Norwegian larvikite for the plinth.

















































