Projects

First White Cloth Hall shortlisted for Yorkshire & Humber Constructing Excellence Award

The award recognises projects that have delivered excellent outcomes and high standards of repair.

The restoration of Leeds’ First White Cloth Hall has been shortlisted in the Conservation and Regeneration category at this year’s Constructing Excellence Awards.

A Grade II* listed building, the First White Cloth Hall is one of the most significant historic buildings in Leeds city centre. Based on Kirkgate, Leeds’ oldest street, it was the first covered area to trade in cloth in Leeds and was instrumental in the development of the city’s textile trade.

Despite its significance, over the years the building gradually fell out of use and its condition declined. In 1999, it was placed on Historic England’s At Risk Register and was vacated around 2010. By this point, the building’s West Wing had been demolished due to serious structural issues and what remained of the rest of the building was in extremely poor condition.

It was acquired by developers Rushbond in 2017 who appointed us to carry out a complete restoration of the building and optimise its potential as a significant building within Leeds’ heritage landscape.

interior view of first white cloth hall with walking man on stairs
Interior of the restored First White Cloth Hall

Funded by Historic England, National Lottery Heritage Fund and Leeds City Council, the complex project has seen the building pulled back from the brink of complete ruin through considered conservation and repair. Where possible, surviving elements of the original brick and stone walls have been conserved and incorporated into the new designs, leaving a raw, textural character to the interior spaces. The restoration also included a complete reinstatement of the original West Wing, which was lost during demolition in 2010, and the creation of a new central, top-lit atrium which reveals the original building form and animates the space that was originally a hub of activity.

As a result of the restoration, the building has now been removed from Historic England's At Risk register, after almost 20 years on the list.

The Conservation and Regeneration category recognises projects that have delivered excellent outcomes and high standards in the repair, re-use and revilalisation of heritage sites and buildings in the region.

Winners of this year’s awards will be announced at a ceremony on Thursday 14th July at the Queen’s Hotel in Leeds.

alternative interior of the first white cloth hall - white walls and wooden beams across ceiling
Interior of the restored First White Cloth Hall