History

Photo:Mike Gutteridge

Photo:Mike Gutteridge

Recognised as one of the most impressive examples of Roman Revival civic architecture, the style of Town Hall is based upon the Roman Temple of Castor and Pollux.

It was designed by Joseph Aloyisus Hansom, who is better known as the creator of the famous ‘Hansom cab’. Naively agreeing to underwrite the cost of the project resulted in the bankruptcy and financial ruin of the 27-year-old.

Built in a period when Birmingham rallied at the forefront of the protests for national democratic reform, Town Hall provided citizens with a forum for political debate as well as an important symbol of their, and the town’s, purpose and aspirations. It was the meeting place for local government until the Council House opened in the 1870s, Town Hall continued as a forum for debate and speech-making through the 20th century. Since its opening, practically every prime minister and politician of note has spoken there; with notable speakers including Joseph Chamberlain, William Gladstone, David Lloyd George, Neville Chamberlain, Clement Atlee, Neil Kinnock and Margaret Thatcher.

Town Hall was, and will be again, an internationally recognised venue for music, in particular the Triennial Music Festivals (between 1834 and 1912). Home to the CBSO between 1926 and 1991, the Hall has showcased many premieres and reverberated to every type of music from Elgar to the Rolling Stones, Mendelssohn to The Beatles and Count Basie to Black Sabbath.

It has also hosted a wide variety of events including wrestling matches, Charles Dickens’ reading of A Christmas Carol, graduation ceremonies and craft fairs! Closed in 1996 on health and safety grounds and concerns over structural stability, Town Hall has undergone numerous alterations and changes to reflect the needs of users and performers of the time; the 21st-century redevelopment was the next stage in that process.

  • Town Hall: A History in Pictures

    Birmingham’s magnificent Town Hall has hosted events of every kind and variety since it was built in 1834. Now re-opened and handsomely renovated, this fascinating pictorial history of the Hall recalls many of the astonishing events and occasio... more

  • Re-opening Festival

    Town Hall, Birmingham re-opened on Thursday 4 October with a two-week festival of events on the theme Celebrating the Past, Pioneering the Future. more

  • Restoration Project

    More information on how a dedicated team of conservation and construction experts, led by Wates Construction, Urban Design and Rodney Melville and Partners, painstakingly restored this Grade 1 listed buiding. more

Email this page to a friend

Book Tickets

phone 0121 780 3333
or browse and book online

Image is of a previous production

The Rat Pack

Thu 18 - Sat 20 Mar

Live From Las Vegas

Arun Ghosh

Arun Ghosh Sextet

Fri 9 Apr