Dale Street Warehouse is an early 19th-century warehouse in the Piccadilly Basin area of Manchester city centre, England. It is a Grade II* listed building as of 10 November 1972.[1] It is the earliest surviving canal warehouse in the city.[2] The building is dated 1806 with the initials "WC" on the datestone, indicating that it was designed by William Crosley,[3] an engineer who worked with William Jessop on the inner-Manchester canal system.

Constructed of watershot millstone grit blocks, the four-storey building has timber floors, supported throughout by cast-iron columns, a feature which now makes it unique amongst Manchester warehouses.[3] The base of the building incorporates four boatholes, which allowed boats to unload their cargoes inside of the warehouse. The warehouse also incorporates a "subterranean wheel-pit containing a 16-foot water-wheel used to drive hoists both in this building and in a former warehouse to the south via a line-shaft tunnel which mostly survives beneath the car-park".[1]

For many years, the building was a shop and was described in 2000 as "sadly neglected";[4] the warehouse has now been converted to office space and a café and renamed Carver's Warehouse.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b "Dale Warehouse, Manchester". British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 14 May 2011.
  2. ^ Clare Hartwell, Pevsner Architectural Guides: Manchester; p. 219
  3. ^ a b Hartwell, Clare; Hyde, Matthew; Pevsner, Nikolaus (2004). The Buildings of England - Lancashire: Manchester and the South East. Yale University Press. p. 304. ISBN 978-0-300-10583-4.
  4. ^ John J. Parkinson-Bailey Manchester: an Architectural History, p. 323

References

  • Pevsner, Nikolaus; Hartwell, Clare & Hyde, Matthew, The Buildings of England: Lancashire - Manchester and the South East (2004) Yale University Press
  • Hartwell, Claire Pevsner Architectural Guides: Manchester (2001) Yale University Press

53°28′49″N 2°13′55″W / 53.48026°N 2.23196°W / 53.48026; -2.23196