Latitude: 53.7984 / 53°47'54"N
Longitude: -1.5526 / 1°33'9"W
OS Eastings: 429569
OS Northings: 433664
OS Grid: SE295336
Mapcode National: GBR BHL.24
Mapcode Global: WHC9D.3SYD
Plus Code: 9C5WQCXW+9X
Entry Name: St Paul's House and attached railings and gates
Listing Date: 26 September 1963
Last Amended: 11 September 1996
Grade: II*
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1256126
English Heritage Legacy ID: 465247
ID on this website: 101256126
Location: Leeds, West Yorkshire, LS1
County: Leeds
Electoral Ward/Division: City and Hunslet
Parish: Non Civil Parish
Built-Up Area: Leeds
Traditional County: Yorkshire
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): West Yorkshire
Church of England Parish: Leeds St George
Church of England Diocese: Leeds
Tagged with: Building
This list entry was subject to a Minor Amendment on 18 August 2021 to reformat text to current standards
SE2933NE
714-1/75/378
LEEDS
ST PAUL'S STREET (North side)
Nos.20 and 22
St Paul's House and attached railings and gates
(Formerly Listed as: ST PAUL'S STREET (North side) Nos.20 AND 22 St Paul's House)
26/09/63
GV
II*
Factory and showrooms, now offices, with gates and railings. 1878, altered and restored with wholly new interior in 1976. By Thomas Ambler. For John Barran. Brick with terracotta by Doulton, wrought-iron gates by Frances Skidmore. Four storeys with added attic storey, twelve x five bays with angled entrance bay at soth east corner blocked 1976 and central entrance inserted on north side, facing Park Square. In an ornate Hispano-Moorish style.
The blocked corner entrance, now a window, has a Moorish arch and paired flanking columns, walls lined with glazed tiles. The elaborate entrance gates of ribbon-like scrolls and flowers were reduced in height and removed to the north entrance 1976. Facades consist of a repeated bay design in which ground and mezzanine windows are united within a large segmental arch of moulded terracotta. First and second floors similarly linked, a giant trabeated frame forming a transom at intermediate floor level and Moorish colonnettes as mullions.
Third floor: triple Moorish arches to lower windows; bands of cusping at eaves, brick and terracotta parapet pierced with cinquefoil openings. Attached octagonal buttresses at the corners rise above the parapet as elaborate corner finials in the style of minarets, restored. Brick and stone piers on south side, cast-iron panels with star motifs between, repeated on other facades.
INTERIOR: not inspected.
HISTORICAL NOTE: John Barran was responsible for the development of Leeds as a centre of wholesale clothing manufacture, the siting of his factory in Park Square reflects the importance of this part of the city in the development of the clothing industry. He was Mayor of Leeds and MP 1876-85. Thomas Ambler also designed many of the buildings in Boar Lane. One of the few executed buildings influenced by the publication of Owen Jones' measured drawings of the Alhambra in the 1840s (Linstrum, p.306).
Listing NGR: SE2956933664
External links are from the relevant listing authority and, where applicable, Wikidata. Wikidata IDs may be related buildings as well as this specific building. If you want to add or update a link, you will need to do so by editing the Wikidata entry.
Other nearby listed buildings