Victorian Arcade | |
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General information | |
Status | Grade II listed |
Type | Shopping arcade |
Location | Walsall, West Midlands |
Country | United Kingdom |
Coordinates | 52°35′01.51″N 1°58′53.96″W / 52.5837528°N 1.9816556°W grid reference SP 013 984 |
Completed | 1897 |
Victorian Arcade, in Walsall, West Midlands, is a shopping arcade in the town centre, built in the 1890s. It is a Grade II listed building;[1]
The site, formerly the Shambles, a meat market dating from the medieval period, was redeveloped as a shopping arcade in 1895–7. The architect was Jonathon Ellis. Originally named Digbeth Arcade, it has been restored in recent years, and renamed Victorian Arcade. The T-shaped plan is unchanged from the original design.[1]
There are entrances on Bradford Street on the north-west, Digbeth Street on the north-east and Lower Hall Lane on the south-east. The frontage on Bradford Street has a first-floor balcony of five bays: there are iron balustrades, with shops and office chambers behind. There are timber oriel windows on the floor above. There was originally a five-bay upper floor on the Digbeth Street frontage, replaced during the 20th century.[1]
Inside, the arms of the arcade have a barrel-vaulted glass roof; they meet at an octagonal space under a glazed dome. Some of the shop fronts in the arcade are original.[1]
Media related to Victorian Arcade, Walsall at Wikimedia Commons