Baskerville House

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Front of Baskerville House after refurbishment 2006
Front of Baskerville House after refurbishment 2006
Baskerville House, west-facing side, prior to redvelopment
Baskerville House, west-facing side, prior to redvelopment
Industry and Genius, 1990, by David Patten, sculpture outside Baskerville House
Industry and Genius, 1990, by David Patten, sculpture outside Baskerville House

Baskerville House, previously called the Civic Centre, is a former civic building in Centenary Square, Birmingham, England.

Built in 1938 (architect T. Cecil Howitt of Nottingham) it was the only component built from a grand plan for a new civic campus by Howitt which would have covered all of Centenary Square and the Convention Centre, and included the Masonic Hall (1926-7 Rupert Savage) (vacated Central Television building) and Birmingham Municipal Bank (recently TSB) building (1931-3 also T. Cecil Howitt) on Broad Street. World War II halted construction of Baskerville House (hemce the rear, brick, wall, intended to be temporary), and after the war the use of Roman Imperial imagery on public buildings went out of fashion. A 1941 model of the proposed Civic Centre, designed by William Haywood FRIBA, Secretary of The Birmingham Civic Society, is displayed in the Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery.

Formerly City Council Offices, this grade II listed building remained vacant for several years after the City Council vacated the property in the spring of 1998. The initial refurbishment plan proposed conversion to a hotel, but the building has subsequently been completely gutted and extended two floors upwards to provide office space on 7 floors, and health club in the basement. Work started in August 2003 and was completed in early 2007 at an estimated cost of £30 million.

Baskerville House was built on the site of Easy Hill, the home of John Baskerville. A sculpture of the Baskerville typeface, Industry and Genius, in his honour stands outside the main entrance to Baskerville House in Centenary Square. It is by local artist David Patten.[1].

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Buildings in Birmingham, England
 Highrise (In height order): BT Tower | Beetham Tower | Chamberlain Clock Tower | Alpha Tower | Orion Building | The Rotunda | NatWest Tower | Five Ways Tower | Centre City Tower | Hyatt Regency Hotel | 1 Snow Hill Plaza | Quayside Tower | Colmore Gate | The McLaren Building | Metropolitan House | Edgbaston House | Post & Mail Building | Jury's Inn Birmingham 

 Notable lowrise: 1-7 Constitution Hill | 17 & 19 Newhall Street | Birmingham Assay Office | Baskerville House | Central Library | Council House | Curzon Street railway station | Great Western Arcade | ICC | The Mailbox | Methodist Central Hall | Millennium Point | The Old Crown | Paradise Forum | Birmingham Proof House | Sarehole Mill | Symphony Hall | Town Hall | Victoria Law Courts 
 Major railway stations: Moor Street station | New Street station | Snow Hill station 
  Major complexes: Brindleyplace | Bull Ring, Birmingham | Pallasades Shopping Centre 
  Sports venues: Alexander Stadium | Edgbaston Cricket Ground | NIA | St. Andrews | Villa Park 
  Lists of buildings: List of tallest buildings and structures in Birmingham | List of Birmingham board schools | Listed buildings in Birmingham