Royal Insurance Building, Liverpool
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The Aloft Liverpool Hotel, formerly the Royal Insurance Building, is a historic building located at 1-9 North John Street,
Liverpool Liverpool is a city and metropolitan borough in Merseyside, England. With a population of in 2019, it is the 10th largest English district by population and its metropolitan area is the fifth largest in the United Kingdom, with a populat ...
,
Merseyside Merseyside ( ) is a metropolitan and ceremonial county in North West England, with a population of 1.38 million. It encompasses both banks of the Mersey Estuary and comprises five metropolitan boroughs: Knowsley, St Helens, Sefton, Wi ...
, England. It was built as the head office of the
Royal Insurance Royal Insurance Holdings plc was a large insurance business originating in Liverpool but based in London from the early 20th century. It merged with Sun Alliance in 1996 to form the Royal & Sun Alliance Insurance Group. History Formation and e ...
company.


History

The building was constructed between 1896 and 1903 as the head office of the Royal Insurance Company (Since 1996 part of the ″
RSA Insurance Group RSA Insurance Group Limited ( trading as RSA, formerly RSA Insurance Group plc and Royal and Sun Alliance) is a British multinational general insurance company headquartered in London, England. RSA has major operations in the United Kingdom, Ire ...
″). The design was the result of a competition won by James F. Doyle in 1895. The assessor for the competition was Richard Norman Shaw, Norman Shaw, who was retained as an advisory architect for the project, but it is uncertain what part he played in it. The building is constructed around a steel frame and is the earliest example of this type of construction in the United Kingdom. It ceased to be used by the late 1980s, and its condition deteriorated so much that it was placed on the Heritage at Risk Register, Buildings at Risk Register of English Heritage. In 2013 its freehold was bought by Liverpool City Council, and it was converted it into a hotel. It opened as the Aloft Liverpool Hotel on 29 October 2014. At the 20 years of the register, the renovation of the Royal Insurance Building was named as one of the successful rescues.


Architecture

Constructed around a steel frame, the building is in Portland stone, with a granite basement and ground floor. Its architecture is described as "sumptuous Baroque, Neo-Baroque on the grandest scale". The building is in four storeys with a basement and an attic. Its long front on North John Street has eleven bay (architecture), bays, with three bays on Dale Street. The ground floor and basement are Rustication (architecture), rusticated. The windows are three-light sash windows with round heads. Those on the first floor have Gibbs surrounds and iron balconies. In the second and third floors the windows are recessed behind a Doric order, Doric column, colonnade and entablature. In the attic are dormers. Some of these have architraves, Keystone (architecture), keystones, and either segmental or triangular pediments; the others are flat-topped and contain casement windows. The entrance is on the second bay from the left in North John Street. The doorway has Doric columns and is round-headed. The first floor contains a round-headed window surrounded by a portico with a broken segmental pediment containing carved figures. Above this bay rises a three-stage campanile bearing an octagonal cupola with a gilding, gilded dome. On the Dale Street façade is a Palladian architecture#Venetian and Palladian windows, Venetian window. The second floor contains a frieze designed by C. J. Allen (sculptor), C. J. Allen depicting themes relating to insurance. At the corners of this front are octagonal Turret (architecture), turrets with cupolas and finials. Between the turrets at attic level are three round-headed windows with rusticated Ionic order, Ionic pilasters, an entablature, and an iron balcony. The interior contains the former General Office on the ground floor which, because of the steel frame, is free from any columns. Above this, the former Board Room has a barrel vault, tunnel vault. Both rooms are decorated with stucco in 17th-century style. The building is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade II* Listed building#England and Wales, listed building. There is an earlier Royal Insurance Building, Queen Avenue, Liverpool, ''Royal Insurance Building'', dating from 1839, in nearby Queen Avenue, also Grade II* listed.


See also

*Grade II* listed buildings in Merseyside *Architecture of Liverpool


References


External links


Official websiteLiverpool Architecture
{{Liverpool B&S Grade II* listed buildings in Liverpool Edwardian architecture Structures formerly on the Heritage at Risk register Grade II* listed hotels