ELMWOOD HALL IN BELFAST

ELMWOOD HALL IN BELFAST ORIGINALLY A PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

ELMWOOD HALL IN BELFAST - ORIGINALLY A PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

Elmwood Hall was built originally as the Elmwood Presbyterian Church. It was designed in 1859 by amateur architect John Corry, but notbuilt until 1862.

The pulpit and other internal furnishings were removed, along with the stained glass windows. The stonework was restored and the golden weathercock added by HA Patton & Partners in 1975. The polished granite pillars round the front courtyard had lost some of their elaborately carved sandstone capitals, but these were restored in 2000.

Queen's University Belfast converted the church into a concert hall and renamed it Elmwood Hall. The building was deconsecrated and for a time became the home of the Ulster Orchestra.

The building has a mixture of styles, principally Italianate with a spire on top of a campanile.[1] It has been described as one of Ulster's best High Victorian church designs – a triumph of eclecticism, where the combination of apparently discordant elements such as a Renaissance arcade with chunky Venetian columns, mediaeval machicolations, a classical cornice and balustrade, a Moorish well canopy and a French needle spire are absorbed into a coherent but very elaborate Irish version of a Lombard Gothic church (Irish Builder).

Behind the polychrome freestone façade, the interior is surprisingly large, having a great width uninterrupted by roof supports, and a deep gallery running back over both vestibule and loggia, reached by a winding staircase beneath the tower (which, while part of the 1859 design, was added in 1872).

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