Former Liverpool Furnishing Company showroom

Former Liverpool Furnishing Company showroom, 104 and 106 London Road, Liverpool, L3 5JY

Listed on the National Heritage List for England. Search over 400,000 listed places

Explore this list entry

Overview

A bespoke furniture sales showroom later converted to bank and office premises, of 1899 by W Hesketh and Co, of red terracotta in Edwardian Baroque style, with later alterations.
Heritage Category:
Listed Building
Grade:
II
List Entry Number:
1483050
Date first listed:
26-May-2023
List Entry Name:
Former Liverpool Furnishing Company showroom
Statutory Address:
Former Liverpool Furnishing Company showroom, 104 and 106 London Road, Liverpool, L3 5JY
Uploaded by Historic England Communications Team This photo may not represent the current condition of the site. Almost 350,000 images and stories have been added to the Missing Pieces Project so far. Share your story.
View all

Location

Location of this list entry and nearby places that are also listed. Use our map search to find more listed places. 

There is a problem

Use of this mapping is subject to terms and conditions .

This map is for quick reference purposes only and may not be to scale.

What is the National Heritage List for England?

The National Heritage List for England is a unique register of our country's most significant historic buildings and sites. The places on the list are protected by law and most are not open to the public. 

The list includes:

🏠 Buildings
🏰 Scheduled monuments
🌳 Parks and gardens
⚔️ Battlefields
Shipwrecks  

Find out more about listing

Local Heritage Hub

Unlock and explore hidden histories, aerial photography, and listed buildings and places for every county, district, city and major town across England.

Discover more

Official list entry

Heritage Category:
Listed Building
Grade:
II
List Entry Number:
1483050
Date first listed:
26-May-2023
List Entry Name:
Former Liverpool Furnishing Company showroom
Statutory Address 1:
Former Liverpool Furnishing Company showroom, 104 and 106 London Road, Liverpool, L3 5JY

The scope of legal protection for listed buildings

This List entry helps identify the building designated at this address for its special architectural or historic interest.

Unless the List entry states otherwise, it includes both the structure itself and any object or structure fixed to it (whether inside or outside) as well as any object or structure within the curtilage of the building.

For these purposes, to be included within the curtilage of the building, the object or structure must have formed part of the land since before 1st July 1948.

Understanding list entries

Corrections and minor amendments

The scope of legal protection for listed buildings

This List entry helps identify the building designated at this address for its special architectural or historic interest.

Unless the List entry states otherwise, it includes both the structure itself and any object or structure fixed to it (whether inside or outside) as well as any object or structure within the curtilage of the building.

For these purposes, to be included within the curtilage of the building, the object or structure must have formed part of the land since before 1st July 1948.

Understanding list entries

Corrections and minor amendments

Location

Statutory Address:
Former Liverpool Furnishing Company showroom, 104 and 106 London Road, Liverpool, L3 5JY

The building or site itself may lie within the boundary of more than one authority.

District:
Liverpool (Metropolitan Authority)
Parish:
Non Civil Parish
National Grid Reference:
SJ3537990679

Summary

A bespoke furniture sales showroom later converted to bank and office premises, of 1899 by W Hesketh and Co, of red terracotta in Edwardian Baroque style, with later alterations.

Reasons for Designation

The former Liverpool Furnishing Company premises, a bespoke furniture sales showroom of 1899, is listed at Grade II for the following principal reasons:

Architectural interest:

* it is a good example of late-C19 commercial architecture with richly-decorated terracotta facades and timber windows embellished in flamboyant Edwardian Baroque style, and retaining external painted lettering and some surviving interior features;
* it is a prominently sited building with a landmark clock tower.

History

104 and 106 London Road were built as the Liverpool Furnishing Company’s sales premises beginning in 1899, superseding their earlier premises at numbers 100-102. The owner of the business, Jacob Lipson, was a Polish-born Jew who became treasurer and president of the Liverpool New Hebrew Congregation which worshipped at Hope Place synagogue. The opening in May 1900 was celebrated with a Jewish blessing and the building praised in the local newspaper as a landmark (in particular for its clock) and an example for other developers to follow. Edmund Beckett (Lord Grimthorpe) did not patent his clock designs and so although it was reported to use his latest developments, he probably had no direct involvement in the design of the clock by the makers, Joyce of Whitchurch. Local architects W Hesketh and Co designed the building.

Jacob Lipson died in 1908. His oldest son Harold was a furniture manufacturer and probably supplied the dealership, and his second son Arthur had worked for the dealership, but it closed soon afterwards (probably before 1911). By 1915 the United Counties bank occupied the premises, before being acquired by Barclays in 1916. The change of use to banking involved the replacement of the original glazed mahogany shopfronts and ‘refrax’ glass stall risers, by a stucco façade, and subdivision of the originally-open show floors. It is also thought that the staircase was altered and moved with the removal of the carved walnut newels and installation of a wood-panelled passenger lift, while the original furniture lift was removed. Some woodblock and mosaic floors may also have been removed at this time or later.

Barclays remained until the late C20 but by 1975 Natwest had moved in. Goad fire insurance maps of 1944 and 1960, and a 1960s photograph showing external signage, show that the upper floors were used by the woollen trade and as offices for the London and Manchester Assurance Company during this period. Natwest closed the branch in 2013 and the building was empty from 2014, suffering from some vandalism at the time of inspection (2022).

Details

A bespoke furniture sales showroom later converted to bank and office premises, of 1899 by W Hesketh and Co, with later alterations.

MATERIALS: red terracotta and brick, slate roof, timber windows, copper roof to the clock tower.

PLAN: prominently sited on a corner with ranges along London Road and Hart Street and with its clock tower highly visible in the approach to the city centre along London Road. Of a V plan due to the acute angle of the road junction.

EXTERIOR: in Edwardian Baroque style, the principal façade faces London Road and is of three storeys plus an attic and a dormer, and three bays wide, with prominent cornices to the ground, second and attic storeys, and pilasters through the first and second storeys. The ground floor of painted white stucco has an entrance at the left, a window, and two tripartite windows each with a blocked opening for an ATM. Between the windows are channel-rusticated pilasters, and the four principal openings have tall keystones; the pilasters and keystones are linked by a moulded band below the fascia, which also has a modillion cornice.

The upper storeys are in richly ornamented terracotta (supplied by Jabez Thompson of Northwich). The pilasters are fluted with composite capitals and on a ground with prominent horizontal banding in Gibbs style. The first and second floors have full-height windows with moulded string course between them and decorated jambs; the second-floor windows have arched heads with figured keystones and decorated spandrels. These windows have moulded transoms, and (on the second floor) swan-neck pediments to the central light. Above the pilaster capitals the frieze has satyr masks. The cornice above is modillioned and dentilled. The attic floor has paired, blocked colonettes above the pilasters, with single, blocked pilasters flanking the outer windows and between the two central windows, and a dentilled eaves cornice over. At the right is a swan-neck-pedimented cartouche with the monogram of the Liverpool Furnishing Company. The dormer is further decorated with balusters, two keyed-and-festooned oculi, rinceau freeze, a Flemish gable with Jacobean strapwork, and a broken semi-circular pediment.

To the right on the angle is a two-stage octagonal clock tower. The lower stage is banded and pilastered. The upper stage has north-east and north-west skeleton clock faces with opalescent glass, with an entablature above with triglyphs, and an ogee copper dome.

The angle is narrow and splayed, in the same style as the façade, with lancet windows and a corner entrance. Over the second-floor window is a Liver-bird cartouche, and the attic has a swan-neck-pedimented cartouche with the date 1899.

The return to Hart Street is cranked, with a first bay similarly detailed to the facade, with monogram cartouches flanking the attic floor. Above this is a gabled second attic floor adjoining the tower, with a pair of balustraded windows flanked by segmental-pedimented cartouches dated 18 / 99, and fluted, blocked pilasters. The gable is further decorated with three pilasters supporting a scroll pediment.

To the right is a five-bay, three-storey façade with stucco ground-floor to the first four bays (only the first bay being channel-rusticated and having a fascia). The remainder is in orange brick in English Garden Wall bond, with red-brick gables and terracotta dressings. Bays 1 and 5 are gabled and flanked by plain brick pilasters. The windows are segmental headed with figured keystones, and the second floor has a lintel band. Bay 5’s pilasters have large consoles at ground-floor, flanking a blocked coal-hole opening.

The rear and east return are plain with gables, and white glazed tiles to the lower three floors of the east return. The east wall of the front range is abutted by neighbouring buildings. Where it projects above them it is gabled and white-painted lettering just remains legible, reading LIVERPOOL/ FURNISHING CO.

INTERIOR: original window architraves remain, along with cornicing, skirting and later plain doors and partitions. The main stair has square vase balusters and plain newels with ball finials; the back stair is similar with stick balusters. The lift has a wood panelled interior. The shaped-spreader heads of the structural columns are also visible on the second floor. No fireplaces or decorative floors remain and the banking hall is entirely modern. The basement retains some stone flag flooring, tiled coal hole and stone steps to a former access from Hart Street, as well as modern safes. The clock mechanism remains in situ, apparently converted to electric drive, although some weights survive.

Sources

Books and journals
R Pollard & N Pevsner, , The Buildings of England. Lancashire: Liverpool and the South-West (2006), 423
Improving London Road: imposing new business premises in Liverpool Daily Post, ,Vol. , (22/05/1900), 5

Websites
Beckett, Edmund, first Baron Grimthorpe 1816-1905, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, accessed 14/01/22 from https://doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/30665

Legal

This building is listed under the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990 as amended for its special architectural or historic interest.

Ordnance survey map of Former Liverpool Furnishing Company showroom

Map

This map is for quick reference purposes only and may not be to scale. This copy shows the entry on 15-Dec-2025 at 01:30:58.

Download a full scale map (PDF)

© Crown copyright [and database rights] 2025. OS AC0000815036. All rights reserved. Ordnance Survey Licence number 100024900.© British Crown and SeaZone Solutions Limited 2025. All rights reserved. Licence number 102006.006.

End of official list entry

Previous Overview
Next Comments and Photos