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Amounderness House on Lancaster Road in Preston
Amounderness House

Amounderness House, Lancaster Road

Amounderness House, Lancaster Road, seems to be this position that has protected it, as it hasn’t been in use for 20 years!

https://www.blogpreston.co.uk/2023/08/amounderness-house-revamp-plans-lodged-ahead-of-workspace-hub/ – looks like work is starting after very recent planning application, some changes made after concerns raised about the modern replacement building.

Amounderness House, Lancaster Road, is listed on the National Heritage List for England.
It is a Grade II Listed Building with the List Entry Number of 1218215.

https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1218215

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Preston [Listed Building Grade II] - Amounderness House 221013
Amounderness House on Lancaster Road in Preston
Preston - Amounderness House Lancaster Road
Amounderness House on Lancaster Road

Amounderness House History

The building was originally constructed in 1857 as a police station with holding cells, before being extended in 1901.

PHSPS0047 - Amounderness House, Former Preston Police Station And Courtrooms
Amounderness House, Former Preston Police Station and Courtrooms

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MAGISTRATES’ COURT AND POLICE STATION, LANCASTER ROAD — The borough magistrates, at present, hold their court at the Town-hall, and the police-station is in Avenham-street. Spacious premises, from designs by Mr. J. E. Park, are, however, in course of erection, in Lancaster-road, which will afford superior facilities for the transaction of this department of the public business. Previously to the erection of the new police-station, in 1832, the “lock-up” was situated up a dismal alley branching from Turk’s-head-court. The Avenham-street establishment is a massive structure, and affords sufficient accommodation for the police requirements; but the site having been purchased by Messrs. Jacson and Co., cotton spinners, with the view to the enlargement of their premises, the erection of new police buildings became necessary. It was therefore determined to erect a suitable court in connection therewith, the Town-hall being ill adapted for the transaction of the magisterial business. The ground floor of the newbuilding will contain a magistrates’ clerk’s room, superintendent’s office, book-keeper’s and general police office, store room, washing room, and four cells. The upper story will include a private room for the magistrates, jury or attorney’s room, three cells, and a court house, forty feet long by thirty-two feet wide. The principal entrance, in Lancaster road, will present a front of fifty feet. The depth of the building, with front to Earl-street, will be one hundred and four feet. The estimated cost, including fire-proof floors, internal fittings, etc., is about £3,000. The architectural character of the building may be described as an adaptation of the Italian manner to modern and local requirements.

From the HISTORY OF THE BOROUGH OF PRESTON ENVIRONS,
IN THE COUNTY OF LANCASTER;
BY CHARLES HARDWICK, 1858

Avenham Park Lodge in October 2020 by Tony Worrall
Avenham Park Lodge

Avenham Park Lodge

Avenham Park Lodge, also know as the Park Keeper’s Lodge, while modest in scale, forms an integral part of the original Victorian design of Avenham Park. Constructed in the 1860s to house park staff, the lodge reflects the care with which the park was conceived as a civic landscape of national standing. Its architecture, though not individually remarkable, is typical of the picturesque domestic style often employed for park lodges of the period, designed to harmonise with the surrounding greenery rather than dominate it.

Secure
Avenham Park Lodge

The building’s value lies in its context. Together with Miller Park, Avenham Park is recognised as one of the finest examples of Victorian municipal parks in the country. Both parks are Grade II* Listed. The lodge contributes to this completeness of design, embodying the practical and ornamental functions that characterised mid-nineteenth-century public parks. As a familiar point of reference and a reminder of the park’s continuous care and use over more than 150 years, the lodge remains a significant element of Preston’s heritage.

Avenham Park Lodge
Avenham Park Lodge
The Shawes Arms Pub Preston - Tony Worrall 2007
The Shawe’s Arms

The Shawe’s Arms, London Road

Shawe’s Arms, London Road, Privately owned but up for sale, has had repair work carried out but not currently in use.

The building is secure and appears to be water-tight. The roof was replaced relatively recently. This was part of work that an article in Blog Preston described as an ‘extensive structural refurbishment’. There had been a fire in the building, whilst it was described as being in a derelict state during 2022. Fire crews said that youths were spotted climbing the scaffolding and getting on to a flat roof adjoining the building before the fire started. This happened on Sunday 19th June 2022.

The building is in a good location on the River Ribble and is on the Guild Wheel route. Surely there has to be potential for some sort of refreshment stop in that location.

Blog Preston article:
https://www.blogpreston.co.uk/2024/01/shawes-arms-up-for-sale-again-following-extensive-structural-refurbishment/

Shawes Arms, London Road
Shawes Arms, London Road – Derelict Pub

Shawe’s Arms History

The Shawe’s Arms, address is 279 London Road and it is adjacent to the Ribble Bridge in the Fishwick area of Preston. The building is quite small, and it thought that it was originally a Farm-cottage. Shawes Arms was once a landmark pub in Preston, dating back to at least 1824, but it has been closed since 2014.

It was renamed to Shawe’s Arms from the ‘Black Horse’ in 1843. Historically, one of the most well-known landlords was William Lobban (Loban), who ran the establishment from 1892 to 1921.

Walton.
Lobban’s Shawe’s Arms, Fishwick

Why “Shawes Arms”?
The Shawes Arms takes its name from the Shawe (or Shaw) family, who were once prominent landowners in the Fishwick area of Preston. The family lived at Fishwick Hall, recorded in the 18th century as the seat of the Shaws. In 1760, William Shaw, an attorney of Preston, purchased part of the manor of Fishwick and made the hall his residence.

It was common practice for inns and taverns to adopt the arms or surname of influential local families, both as a mark of respect and as a way to identify with the neighbourhood’s gentry. When the former Black Horse Inn on London Road was renamed in the mid-19th century, it became the Shawes Arms, commemorating this family connection.

More in formation about the history of the Shawe’s Arms at Fishwick can be found on the PRESTON’S INNS, TAVERNS and BEERHOUSES website.

https://pubsinpreston.blogspot.com/2012/03/shawes-arms-london-road.html


Shawes Arms.Public house/Inn.
The Shawes Arms public house, next to the river Ribble on January 1st 2003

1964 ADVERT FOR SHAWES ARMS PRESTON
1964 Advert for the Shawes Arms in Preston

The Former Tithebarn Public House Preston - Tony Worrall 2007
Former Tithebarn Pub

The Former Tithebarn Pub
and adjoining former Aladdin’s Cove building

The Former Tithebarn Pub and adjoining former Aladdin’s Cove buildings. The Tithebarn pub building is a council owned building, and was quickly earmarked for demolition by the council. However, Preserving Preston’s Heritage campaigned to save the building. Prior to the news about the demolition being received, the group was already working on a proposal to use the building as a Heritage Centre. PPH’s quickly formulated the remainder of the plans, formed a Community Interest Company and submitted proposals to save the building to Preston City Council. We were successful in saving at least part of the Tithebarn but, at this stage, the Council are proposing that they keep the building and potentially open it up as a public house.

William Hill Betting Office, Tithebarn Street, Preston 1970's
William Hill Betting Office and the Tithebarn Pub on Tithebarn Street in the 1970’s



You can read more about Preserving Preston’s Heritage’s Tithebarn Heritage Centre proposals here:

Blog Preston Article:
https://www.blogpreston.co.uk/2021/12/future-of-former-tithebarn-pub-uncertain/

Plans could save 19th Century pub building – BBC:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cn41yxlk3gxo

The former Aladdin’s Cove building

We are not sure about the adjoining building, which did undergo some improvement work a few years ago. In a poor state of repair but again a historically important and an aesthetically pleasing building. The former warehouses are listed on the National Heritage List for England.


Tithebarn Public House History

The Tithebarn Pub has been on its current site in Preston since approximately 1796. It was previously known as the Waggon and Horses, as it served the blacksmith community of the area – which makes sense of the recent archaeological findings on the site behind. It was also known as The Volunteer and The Stocking. There’s been lots of talk of civic occasions and traditions in the form of the Guild recently but did you know that this was the site of the traditional civic ceremony of Boundary Riding in Preston?

Whilst the building in its current form spent most of its commercial life under the name of “WAGGON AND HORSES”, and was probably built as that establishment, there is evidence to suggest that there were earlier establishments in that location.  It is possible that parts of that building are now included in the fabric of the current building.

Establishments in this location were previously known as “THE STOCKING” and “THE VOLUNTEER”.  There is also a possibility that there was an establishment named the “SETTING DOG” in the early 1700s.

The “SETTING DOG” on Back Weind (now named Lord Street), gleaned via information from Trevor Kirkham of Preston Historical Society, is known to be extant in 1711 and specifically also on 13th May 1736.

The following, referring to the Waggon & Horses, is an extract from the book, ‘Peeps at old Preston’, by George C. Miller that was published in 1957.

The pub (“WAGGON AND HORSES”) took its name from the large number of blacksmiths clustered around the Tithebarn area. The name stayed with the premises for over 200 years before being changed to The Tithebarn. An old town custom called ‘Boundary Riding’ took place here whereupon the Mayor and members of the Corporation would set off on horseback to view the boundaries of the borough. As part of this ceremony, two of the town’s bailiffs were whipped round the nearby pump. Things got out of hand, as these events are wont to do, when the blacksmiths joined in the fray and began to beat the poor bailiffs with iron bars and other iron implements. After this, the old custom was discontinued.

Preston - The Tithebarn PH 240817
The Former Tithebarn Public House after closure – Photographed 24/08/2017

An account by somebody called ‘Mary’, commenting on a Blog Preston article 8 years ago, recalls the following:

I remember it before it was called Tithbarn when it was The Waggon and Horses, a lively public house, packed most night. In the music room there was a piano and many good and famous acts would appear on their way to Blackpool, many using the old bus station across the road, now demolished. In the ‘best room’ people dressed in their best and sat on comfortable upholster seats. A bell just above their heads on the wall pressed when service was required. I remember the old fire station directly opposite on Tithbarn Street. I remember the sweet shop opposite and parched peas sold there.

The Waggon & Horses P.H. Lord Street, Preston c.1961
The Waggon & Horses on Lord Street, Preston, circa 1961
The Park Hotel Preston - Tony Worrall 2015
The Park Hotel

The Park Hotel, East Cliff

The Park Hotel, East Cliff, privately owned, not in use, poor state of repair. Security has been improved and break ins have reduced.

Whilst not been empty for quite as long as the nearby St. Joseph’s Orphanage, it has also been a target for Urban Explorers and has suffered a lot of vandalism. Fortunately, as of September 2025, there doesn’t appear to have been any break-ins that have resulted in serious fire.

This article from the BBC website describes plans for Preston’s Park Hotel to welcome guests for first time in 70 years:

https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-lancashire-68185043

The Park Hotel, Preston.
The Park Hotel

There have been some delays with the planning applications, but things seem to be moving again. The ‘Farington Square’ redevelopment, in which the former hotel is included, will be undertaken by The Heaton Group.


The Park Hotel History

The former Park Hotel was built in 1883 as a railway hotel catering to passengers travelling through Preston. Former guests are reported to have included the future King Edward VII, Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin and Gracie Fields. Its strategic, landmark location offers scenic views of the surrounding parklands and is a key feature of views in the Avenham Conservation Area, which is notable for its mixture of townhouses, attractive views, and listed parks. Both Miller Park and Avenham Park are Grade II* listed and were designed by landscape designer Edward Milner in 1861 and 1864, respectively. Milner (1819-1884) was originally apprenticed to Sir Joseph Paxton, best known for designing the Crystal Palace. Miller and Avenham parks are considered significant as early examples of municipal park. The location of the hotel is therefore extremely sensitive as it is so prominent and affects numerous other heritage assets around it.

The hotel structure was used as offices by Lancashire County Council for a number of decades. The administrators of Lancashire County Council’s own pension fund took ownership of the site in 2016. In 2020, the adjoining 1960s office tower was demolished.

Park Hotel, Preston.
The Harris Institute, Preston, in 2005
The Harris Institute

The Harris Institute

An effort to buy the building as a community asset in 2023 failed – despite a crowdfunding campaign – and instead it was purchased by The Harris Investment Group, based in Bolton.

It will be interesting to see what happens with the latest planning application. As well as the plans for the change of use a separate application has been lodged for consent to convert and make changes to a listed building.

A Facebook post from the Friends of The Harris School of Art in December 2024:

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1AfGbcg2LP/

Preston, Harris Institute.
The Harris Institute


The Harris Institute is listed on the National Heritage List for England.

https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1207231


The Harris Institute History

Originally opened in 1849, the building was later funded by benefactor Edmund Robert Harris. He stipulated it should be used for educational purposes.

It became the Harris School of Art and later the Darul Aloom Islamic Institution. However, the Institute has been empty for almost 10 years and is currently on Historic England’s At Risk Register.

Institution for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge, Preston
Institution for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge, Preston

The Shepherd Library was relocated to the Mechanics Institute and opened in these premises on 29th July 1851. The Preston Institution for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge (or Mechanics’ Institute) building in Avenham was built between 1846 and 1849 by John Welch. It was converted and enlarged from 1882 to serve as a Technological College, parent institution of the Harris Technical School in Corporation, which ultimately became Lancashire Polytechnic, and currently the University of Central Lancashire.

Harris Institute
The Harris Institute in Preston

Arkwright House in Preston - Tony Worrall 2013
Arkwright House

Arkwright House, Stoneygate

Arkwright House, Stoneygate, privately owned, not currently in use. Perhaps the most culturally important building in Preston due to its link with the Father of Industry, Richard Arkwright.

The building was sold in February 2025. It is currently unoccupied and has deteriorated quite rapidly whilst it has been empty.

Arkwright House, Preston
Arkwright House, Stoneygate

Arkwright House on Stoneygate is a Grade II* Listed Building that is listed on the National Heritage List for England.

https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1279775


Arkwright House History

In 1768 this building was the home of Rev. Henry Ellis, the Headmaster of Preston Grammar School. It was also the lodging place of Richard Arkwright and John Kay. During their time here Arkwright and Kay developed the water frame spinning machine that revolutionised the cotton spinning process.

Arkwright Arms Hostel 1952
Arkwright Arms Hostel 1952
Arkwright House, Preston c.1850
Arkwright House

Sir Richard Arkwright (1732–1792)

Sir Richard Arkwright, often called the “father of the factory system,” was born in Preston in 1732, the youngest of thirteen children of a struggling tailor. His early years were spent in the town, where he learned to read and write, and later trained as a barber and wig-maker.

It was in Preston that Arkwright’s inventive streak began to show. By the 1760s he was experimenting with mechanical spinning, working with local craftsmen such as John Kay, a clockmaker. Their efforts produced the machine that became known as the water frame – first powered by horses, later by water. This device transformed cotton spinning from a small-scale domestic craft into an industry that could be organised on a factory scale.

Although Arkwright moved on to Nottingham and then Derbyshire to build his mills, his roots and his earliest experiments were in Preston. The town provided the skills, the contacts, and the determination that he carried into later success.

From these beginnings, Arkwright rose to become one of the most famous figures of the Industrial Revolution. He built great mills, amassed wealth and influence, and was knighted in 1786. Yet his story always begins in Preston – the place where the son of a tailor set out on a path that helped change the world.

Arkwright House
Arkwright House in 2020, before its recent decline

Edith Rigby's House, 27 Winckley Square, is known as College House
Edith Rigby’s House

Edith Rigby’s House, 27 Winckley Square

Edith Rigby’s House, 27 Winckley Square, is known as College House. It is privately owned, and in a poor state of repair but another of vital cultural importance particularly regarding Women’s history.

Repair plan goes in for Edith Rigby House in Winckley Square article on Blog Preston:

Number 27 Winckley Square (formerly Listed as: WINCKLEY SQUARE Nos.27, 28 AND 29) is a Grade II Listed Building. It was originally a large town house, and was formerly part of school, but was last used as offices. It was built circa 1830, but has been subsequently altered.

Preston [Listed Building Grade II] - 27 Winckley Square 210417
Edith Rigby’s House, 28 Winckley Square

Edith Rigby

Edith Rigby is Preston’s most famous suffragette and a woman ahead of her time. She was an extremely brave woman to follow her beliefs and passions despite the social pressure of the day to conform to what was perceived ‘a woman’s place’. She was fiercely committed to her principles and believed passionately in equality for both social class and gender.

Open Plaque - Preston, 28 Winckley Square [Edith Rigby] 180505 [location]
Edith Rigby’s House, on Winckley Square, is known as College House

The Friends of Edith Rigby are a community group dedicated to preserving and celebrating the legacy of Edith Rigby and Preston’s Suffragettes.

https://friendsofedithrigby.wordpress.com

Lancastria House on Lancaster Road in Preston
Lancastria House

Lancastria House, Lancaster Road

Lancastria House, Lancaster Road, beautiful Art Deco building, wasn’t included in Animate plans as it had been previously hinted. Latterly, as of August/September 2025, the building has been designated locally as being in a conservation area.

https://www.blogpreston.co.uk/tag/lancastria-house/

Lancastria House, Lancaster Road, Preston 1988
Lancastria House on Lancaster Road

Lancastria House was built in the 1930s as a prominent showpiece for the Lancastria Co-operative Society, serving as council offices and later home to the Great Times Chinese restaurant before its closure in 2015. The Art Deco building was once slated for demolition during the Animate cinema development but was saved by campaigners and is now a protected part of the Market Place Conservation Area, a move intended to preserve its architectural significance and historical value in the city centre.

The Miller Arcade in Preston - Turkish Baths Sign
Miller Arcade

Miller Arcade, Lancaster Road

Miller Arcade, on Fishergate (also Birley Street, Jacson Street & Lancaster Road), has been in partial use. This has ensured its safety, but there could be so much more made of it – think Victoria Arcade Leeds. Repairs and work needed in the upper part of the building.

Preston’s historic first indoor shopping centre is now a far cry from the popular destination it once was. The Lancashire Post found out what the future holds for the Grade II listed building.

https://www.lep.co.uk/business/it-deserves-to-have-its-future-guaranteed-calls-made-for-preston-grade-ii-listed-miller-arcade-to-be-given-new-lease-of-life-3357593

Miller Arcade
The Miller Arcade on Fishergate

Miller Arcade History

Miller Arcade, Preston – A Victorian Landmark

Miller Arcade is one of Preston’s most distinctive landmarks, a late-Victorian shopping arcade that still draws the eye with its ornate terracotta frontage and glazed interior walkways. Opened at the end of the nineteenth century, it was intended to give the growing town an air of metropolitan sophistication, echoing the grand covered shopping streets of London.

The project was commissioned by Nathaniel Miller, a Preston dentist with the means and vision to create a new type of shopping environment for the city. He held a design competition in the 1890s, and work began soon after. The arcade was completed in 1899. Its inspiration was Burlington Arcade in London, though Preston’s version carried its own character: three storeys high, with richly modelled terracotta elevations and a central glazed roof lighting a tiled shopping passage below.

The site chosen was already long established for trade, replacing the old “Shambles” of small butchers’ stalls and shops. From the outset, Miller Arcade was planned as more than just a row of shops. At street level, there were well-appointed retail units; above, offices, a hotel and accommodation were provided, while leisure amenities were incorporated in the basement. Among the most unusual of these were Turkish baths, which operated for the first half of the twentieth century and became a well-remembered feature of the building. A ballroom and meeting rooms were also provided at various times, reflecting how Victorian arcades often mixed commerce with recreation.

Over time, the arcade has undergone changes. Decorative corner turrets were removed in the early twentieth century, and like many city-centre premises, upper floors have seen varied use and periods of vacancy. The ground floor, however, has remained in near-continuous occupation, adapting to changing retail fashions. Restaurants, cafés and specialist shops now line the tiled passage that has welcomed Preston shoppers for over a century.

In recognition of its architectural and historic value, Miller Arcade was granted Grade II listed status in 1979. This protects its richly detailed façade and interior fittings, ensuring that any alterations respect its character. Conservation remains an ongoing concern, particularly for the largely unused upper floors, but the building continues to serve as both a shopping destination and a reminder of Preston’s late Victorian ambition.

Today, Miller Arcade stands not just as a commercial space but as a piece of living heritage. Its combination of architectural flourish and social history — from Turkish baths to twenty-first century dining — captures something of the changing story of Preston itself. For many local people, it remains a favourite place to meet, shop and explore, while for visitors it offers a glimpse into the city’s proud past.

The New Miller Arcade
The New Miller Arcade from an Artists Impression

Nathaniel Miller rose from very humble beginnings to be Mayor of Preston in 1910 and 1911. He was involved in public life for 45 years. Nathaniel Miller and his family were very influential in the life of Preston, particularly during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He had a significant impact on health care as well as his civic roles.