Hans Price

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Hans Price made a significant addition to Weston town hall
Hans Price made a significant addition to Weston town hall

Hans Price (1835 - 1912) was the architect responsible for much of the development of Weston-super-Mare, in North Somerset, England, during the Victorian era.[1]

Contents

[edit] Life

Hans Fowler Price was born in Langford, Somerset. He studied under Thomas Barry in Liverpool. By the time that he married Jane Baker in 1862 he had already established his own architectural practice in Weston-super-Mare.

Jane's father was the solicitor to the Smyth Pigott family who were major landowners in the town. Price used these connections to build his business and his personal standing. He spent time as a Town Commissioner, a director of the Gaslight Company, and on many other boards and committees.

[edit] Style

Queens Road, which leads up to the Town Quarry
Queens Road, which leads up to the Town Quarry

While Price successfully mixed styles such as Gothic, Moorish and Flemish in different buildings, his works invariably used materials characteristic of the area. Grey Mendip limestone formed the walls, generally as squared rubble blocks. These was decorated with pale yellow Bath Stone quoins and details, and roofed with Welsh slate shipped across the River Severn or tiles produced at the Royal Pottery, Weston-super-Mare. Both domestic and public buildings of this description are familiar in Weston-super-Mare, Clevedon, and elsewhere in the area, having been built from the 1840s through to the 1900s. Many of these were designed by other architects and builders who were influenced by Price's work.

Although rows of Price's houses have a standardised look, the extensive use of individual details in areas such as gables and windows mean that no two adjacent buildings look the same, although individual details were often repeated further down the road.

[edit] Works

Wooler Road, building at forefront was originally part of the nearby hospital
Wooler Road, building at forefront was originally part of the nearby hospital

Using his family connections, Price was responsible for developing much of the housing on Worlebury Hill to the north of the developing Weston-super-Mare town centre. Many buildings in Church Road, Grove Park Road, Cecil Road, South Road and other roads in the district were designed in his offices.

Wadham Street
Wadham Street

Public buildings designed by Hans Price include:

  • In Weston-super-Mare

Wadham Street Baptist Church (1862). Situated in the oldest part of the town, this church was built using parts of the first public building in Weston-super-Mare that had been on the same site. It now houses the Blakehay Theatre.[2]

Hospital Dispensary
Hospital Dispensary

Hospital (1865). Later becoming the dispensary for an expanded hospital in Alfred Street, this building has been converted into flats and is known as Hans Price House.

Old Pier Toll House
Old Pier Toll House

Toll House and Piermaster's House (1867) and Birnbeck Pierhead buildings (1897) . The pier links Worlebury Hill and Birnbeck island at the northern limit of the sea front. The building is currently derelict and, as is the pier itself, in need of being found a new sustainable use that will allow its restoration.[3]

Bristol Road
Bristol Road

Bristol Road Baptist Church (1866). This church is built in pink limestone. It serves the upper class housing development on Worlebury Hill and is situated just above The Boulevard.

Sanatorium
Sanatorium

Sanatorium (1871). Situated in Uphill Road North at the south end of the beach, the Royal Hospital has since been converted into flats as part of the Royal Sands housing development. The Hans Price-designed building is now known as Royal Court[4]

Church Institute
Church Institute

The Boulevard (1874-81). Price built piecemeal much of this street including his own office (1874), Church Institute (1881)...

Lodge of St Kew
Lodge of St Kew

Masonic Lodge of St Kew (1881 – now the Constitutional Club)...

Weston Mercury Office
Weston Mercury Office

and the Weston Mercury newspaper office (1885).

Somerset House
Somerset House

Somerset House (1897-9).This terrace of shops occupies the east side of the northern section of the High Street. The central section once housed a market hall but this was destroyed by fire in the 1960s and was replaced by The Playhouse theatre.[5]

School of Science and Art
School of Science and Art

The School of Science and Art (1892). This is now the Art Department of Weston College in Lower Church Road.[6]

Town Hall
Town Hall

Town Hall (1897). Hans Price was responsible for the extension of an earlier Town Hall in Walliscote Road.

Walliscote School
Walliscote School

The Board Schools (1897). Now Walliscote School, separate boys' and girls' schools were built on a shared site close to the Town Hall.

Locking Road School
Locking Road School

Locking Road Schools. This was the Walliscote Senior School for many years but has now been converted to flats.

Public Library
Public Library

Public Library (1899). A rare building that makes extensive use of red brick. It is situated at the eastern end of The Boulevard.

Gaslight Company
Gaslight Company

Weston-super-Mare Gaslight Company (1912). The workshops for the gas company in Burlington Street now houses the North Somerset Museum.

The toll house on Clevedon Pier, designed by Hans Price
The toll house on Clevedon Pier, designed by Hans Price
  • Elsewhere:

[edit] Legacy

Hans Price House stands on the corner of Hans Price Close
Hans Price House stands on the corner of Hans Price Close
The Muses above the Library
The Muses above the Library

The art gallery in Weston College is called the Hans Price Gallery and is housed in a building, the former School of Science an Art that was designed by Price. The old Weston-super-Mare Hospital dispensary has been named Hans Price House and stands on the corner of Hans Price Close.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Taylor, Martin (2004). Hans Fowler Price. Weston-super-Mare: Weston-super-Mare Civic Society. 
  2. ^ Short History. Friends of the Blakehay. Retrieved on 2007-07-05.
  3. ^ Birnbeck Pier A Brief History. Weston-super-Mare Pier Company. Retrieved on 2007-07-05.
  4. ^ Building News 1871. Rossbret Institutions. Retrieved on 2007-07-05.
  5. ^ History. The Playhouse, Weston-super-Mare. Retrieved on 2007-07-05.
  6. ^ School of Science and Art. Images of England. Retrieved on 2007-07-05.
  7. ^ History - Part 1: The building of Clevedon Pier. The Clevedon Pier and Heritage Trust. Retrieved on 2007-07-05.
  8. ^ Ten Endangered Buildings (PDF). The Victorian Society. Retrieved on 2007-07-05.
  9. ^ The Town Market Hall. Images of England. Retrieved on 2007-07-05.