 Barking Town Hall Clock - Barking, London, UK
N 51° 32.172 E 000° 04.745
31U E 297431 N 5713499
The town hall is in the centre of Barking and its clock tower can be seen from miles around. The tower is tall, built of red brick and, above the clock, houses communication devices.
Waymark Code: WMJ2YK
Location: London, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 09/14/2013
Views: 3
The tower has a clock on each face. The brickwork of the tower is used to
forma part of the clock with the brickwork forming the clock face. The centre
part of the clock face is made from different material than brick. There are no
minute markers. The hour markers have the appearance of apostrophes with those
at 3, 6, 9 & 12 having pointed tops. The marks are a pastel shade of yellow with
the apostrophe dots being white. The hands, with tails, are black.
The council's
Museum and Heritage website tells us about the town hall:
Before Barking became a Borough in 1931, its Town Hall
had been a Victorian building in East Street, (later used as a Magistrates’
Court). An up-to-date civic headquarters was required to reflect Barking’s
new Borough status. A competition was held, and the winning plans, by
architects Herbert Jackson and Reginald Edmonds, were agreed in October
1936. A swathe of buildings between Barking Broadway and Axe Street were
demolished to make way for the new Town Hall, but by the time war broke out
in 1939 only its basements had been completed. Building work was then
abandoned, but the basements were used as air raid shelters, a
decontamination centre and Air Raid Precaution (ARP) headquarters.
Due to the difficulties of post-war reconstruction, work on the Town Hall
did not resume until April 1954. It was carried out by the Council’s Direct
Works Organization, and at the time was believed to be the largest civic
scheme in the country built by a council workforce. The first stage,
consisting of the Civic Suite and Municipal Offices, was officially opened
in December 1958 and cost £476,000 to build. Its most imposing feature was
the four-faced clock tower towards the eastern end.
The Assembly Hall, facing the ancient Curfew Tower at the western end,
followed in 1961 at a cost of £154,000. It achieved fame as a concert venue
and its excellent acoustics made it a popular recording studio, especially
for classical music.
Architectural features:
The Town Hall was constructed in small red bricks with red bold roll clay
tiles and wooden Georgian-style sash windows. The gates to the main entrance
were made using oak salvaged from the 16th century Court House (which had
been Barking’s Town Hall until 1894) on its demolition in 1926.
The main foyer area contained Ashburton marble faced columns with the dado
in Travertine. The floor was laid out in a pattern of terrazzo tiles. The
Council Chamber was panelled with walnut, and the anteroom with figured teak
and straight-grained elm. The walls of the Mayor’s Parlour were faced in
wych elm.
21st century refurbishment:
Between 2002-04 the Town Hall was extensively refurbished. Disabled access
was improved, and a stunning barrel-vaulted illuminated glass bridge
inserted above the foyer area. Designed by the architects Hawkins Brown, it
consisted of sheets of glass packed vertically and spanning between steel
beams that are profiled to follow the line of the vaults.
The Council Chamber was refurbished and air-conditioned, and councillors
provided with a state of the art microphone management and electronic voting
system. Audio-visual specialists Brahler UK provided 45 single and 5 dual
flush-mounted units at the councillors’ desks, as well as one at the
Mayoral position and a public gallery question point on the balcony. The
units all housed their own speakers, and utilised smart card technology to
give the councillors their microphone and voting privileges. Braille
characters were added below each button to assist councillors with visual
impairment.
In 2005 a mural 5 metres wide by 3 metres high was placed in the Town Hall
foyer. Designed by J.P. Trevor, it was called “Hero Shot” and featured key
events, landmarks and architectural features from the Borough’s history.
Status: Working
 Display: Mounted
 Year built: 12/01/1958
 Web link to additional info: Not listed

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Visit Instructions: Photo of clock.
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