Dunfermline City Chambers

Municipal Building in Dunfermline, Scotland From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dunfermline City Chambers is a municipal facility at the corner of Bridge Street and Kirkgate in Dunfermline, Fife. The building, which serves as home to the local area committee of Fife Council, is a Category A listed building.[1]

Location3 Bridge Street, Dunfermline
Coordinates56.0708°N 3.4640°W / 56.0708; -3.4640
Built1879
Quick facts Location, Coordinates ...
Dunfermline City Chambers
Dunfermline City Chambers
Location3 Bridge Street, Dunfermline
Coordinates56.0708°N 3.4640°W / 56.0708; -3.4640
Built1879
ArchitectJames Campbell Walker
Architectural styleFrench Gothic style
Listed Building – Category A
Designated12 January 1971
Reference no.LB25973
Dunfermline City Chambers is located in Fife
Dunfermline City Chambers
Shown in Fife
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History

The building was commissioned to replace the old town house in Bridge Street which had been completed in 1771.[2] After rapid industrial growth in the local area,[3] civic leaders decided they needed a more substantial facility and the old town house was demolished, to make way for the current building.[2]

The foundation stone for the new building was laid on 11 October 1876.[2] It was designed by James Campbell Walker in the French Gothic style, built by Messrs W & J Hutchison and completed in May 1879.[4] The design involved an asymmetrical main frontage with twelve bays facing onto Kirkgate; the southern section featured a doorway with an octagonal turret above in the south east corner, while the northern section featured an elaborate doorway with a balcony and prominent four-face clock tower with bartizans in the north east corner.[1] The structure included heraldic stones, recovered from the demolished 18th century town house, which may have originated from the now derelict Dunfermline Palace, a few hundred yards to the south.[5] The stonework on the Bridge Street façade included busts of Malcolm Canmore, Queen Margaret, Robert the Bruce and Elizabeth de Burgh.[6] Internally, the principal room was the council chamber on the first floor: it incorporated an oak hammerbeam roof.[1] There were police cells in the basement of the building.[6]

The building was the headquarters of the royal burgh of Dunfermline until it was replaced by Dunfermline District under the wider Fife Regional Council in May 1975.[7][8] The building ceased to be a seat of government after the district council was abolished in 1996, under the Local Government etc. (Scotland) Act 1994.[9] Since then, the building has served as the home of the local area committee of Fife Council,[10] as a venue for marriages and civil partnerships[11] and as the local registration office.[12]

Works of art in the city chambers include Sir Joseph Paton's painting of Queen Margaret and Malcolm Canmore.[13][14]

See also

References

Further reading

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