Latitude: 53.4428 / 53°26'34"N
Longitude: -3.0002 / 3°0'0"W
OS Eastings: 333658
OS Northings: 394467
OS Grid: SJ336944
Mapcode National: GBR 717.0V
Mapcode Global: WH870.WQHK
Plus Code: 9C5RCXVX+4W
Entry Name: Warehouse at 6 Effingham Street
Listing Date: 27 April 2015
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1419253
ID on this website: 101419253
Location: Sandhills, Sefton, Merseyside, L20
County: Sefton
Electoral Ward/Division: Linacre
Parish: Non Civil Parish
Built-Up Area: Bootle
Traditional County: Lancashire
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Merseyside
Church of England Parish: Bootle St Matthew with St Mary
Church of England Diocese: Liverpool
Tagged with: Warehouse
Warehouse, 1884. Fireproof cast-iron frame construction encased internally in concrete. Mellow red-brick exterior with red and blue-black brick dressings. Seven storeys plus basement.
Warehouse, 1884. Fireproof cast-iron frame construction encased internally in concrete. Mellow red-brick exterior with red and blue-black brick dressings. Seven storeys plus basement
PLAN: the warehouse, which is located on the south side of Effingham Street, has a rectangular plan with a relatively narrow frontage, but a depth that extends far back to the rear. It is enclosed on both sides by other warehouses originally of a similar date and style, but which have been heavily altered and substantially reduced in height. Napier Street, which was originally located to the rear of the warehouse, has since been built upon and replaced by modern warehousing.
EXTERIOR: the warehouse's front (north) elevation facing Effingham Street is of four bays with a raised ground floor and two loading bays to bays two and four set within full-height recesses with blue-black, cut and rubbed brick quoining detail and red-brick arched heads. Tiered sheet-iron loading doors bearing the names of the O & D Williams and Thomas Brothers iron foundries survive, along with semi-circular cast-iron heads to the top of the loading bays displaying the initials 'D.H' and the date '1884' in relief, and original protective timber fenders (to prevent bales damaging the building when first lifted) flanking the base of each loading bay. The bay to the far left of the elevation has a segmental-arched entrance to the ground floor (accessing the warehouse's stair) containing a studded sheet-iron door set within a cast-iron frame with some surrounding replaced brickwork. Above the entrance are a series of slender stair windows with cast-iron frames and sheet-iron shutters, red-brick segmental-arched heads, and blue-black, cut and rubbed brick sills. Set to bay three are wider, squarer windows in the same style that light the internal storage areas and diminish in size slightly with every floor level (smallest at the top). At the top of the elevation, in line with the windows below, is an oculus with a red-brick surround lighting the jigger loft (the top floor where the hoist machinery was housed), whilst above, and stretching across the elevation, is the remains of a sandstone cornice. The brickwork on the west (right side) elevation has been repaired at the front corner, presumably when the adjacent warehouse was reduced in height. The warehouse's roof is hidden from view on both sides by a brick parapet (a fireproofing measure to prevent fire travelling between neighbouring buildings) with sandstone copings.
INTERIOR: internally there is an enclosed stone stair set to the front left of the building within a brick stair compartment that accesses all the warehouse's floor levels. Sheet-iron doors set within cast-iron frames lead off to the right on each floor level into large open-plan warehouse spaces, which have cast-iron framed floors, ceilings and supporting piers all encased in concrete. On various floor levels there are surviving chains suspended from the ceiling. The first floor contains a small foreman's style office structure* set in between the loading bays, which probably dates to the mid-C20 and is not of special interest. The jigger loft was not accessible and it is unknown whether any hoist machinery survives.
* Pursuant to s.1 (5A) of the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Area) Act 1990 ('the Act') it is declared that these aforementioned features are not of special architectural or historic interest.
This list entry was subject to a Minor Amendment on 30 August 2023 to correct the name and address and to reformat the text to current standards
A number of Building Acts introduced in the early-mid C19 stipulated the use of structural features into warehouse design that would make warehouses less likely to collapse in the advent of fire, such as cast-iron columns on the ground floor, an enclosed stair bay, and timbers of a certain thickness. However, unlike in textile mills, fireproof construction in warehouses was not enforced and many continued to be built with either none or very limited provision throughout the C19.
In the late-C19 Effingham Street, which is located just to the east of Brocklebank Dock and close to the former site of the North Carriers Dock (infilled in the late-C20), was lined on both sides by tall multi-storey warehouses. A short terrace of houses was also located at the western end of the street on the north side, in a space now occupied by mid-C20 warehousing. The warehouse at 6 Effingham Street is believed to have been constructed in 1884 as a cotton warehouse for Messrs D & L Hughes. Goad's Fire Insurance Plans of 1890 record that at that time all the warehouses in Effingham Street were owned by the Hughes'.
In 1920 the IRA attacked and destroyed a number of warehouses in Liverpool and Bootle, including on Effingham Street. Further warehouses on Effingham Street were damaged during the Second World War, and with later disuse and changing needs the majority have since been reduced in height to single storey and two storeys and amalgamated internally.
The warehouse at 6 Effingham Street is listed at Grade II for the following principal reasons:
* Architectural form: its design is above the purely functional, incorporating polychrome brickwork dressings, an oculus, and the remains of a sandstone cornice to the principal elevation;
* Technological interest: its fireproof features highlight the changing technology, and developments, in warehouse construction during the C19;
* Degree of survival: it is little altered externally and the interior retains its original open-plan floor arrangements and numerous original features;
* Historic interest: it is an important survival of a late-C19 warehouse associated with the trade of the international port of Liverpool at the peak of its prosperity, expansion and success, acting as a physical reminder of the late-C19 character of the northern dock areas, once densely packed and characterised by canyon-like streets of tall warehouses.
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