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List Entry Summary

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

Name: Roman Catholic Cathedral

List Entry Number: 1070607

Location

Roman Catholic Cathedral, Mount Pleasant

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

County: 
District: Liverpool
District Type: Metropolitan Authority
Parish: Non Civil Parish

National Park: Not applicable to this List entry.

Grade: II*

Date first listed: 14-Mar-1975

Date of most recent amendment: 07-Feb-1994


Legacy System Information

The contents of this record have been generated from a legacy data system.

Legacy System: LBS

UID: 359118


Asset Groupings

This List entry does not comprise part of an Asset Grouping. Asset Groupings are not part of the official record but are added later for information.


List Entry Description

Summary of Building

Legacy Record - This information may be included in the List Entry Details.

Reasons for Designation

Legacy Record - This information may be included in the List Entry Details.

History

Legacy Record - This information may be included in the List Entry Details.

Details

This list entry was subject to a Minor Amendment on 12 July 2022 to update the text and reformat to current standards

SJ 3590 SE 55/777

MOUNT PLEASANT (north side), L3 Roman Catholic Cathedral

(Formerly listed as: Crypt to Roman Catholic Cathedral)

14.3.75

GV II*

Roman Catholic Cathedral of 1962-67 by F Gibberd and earlier Crypt, adjoining.

Crypt: 1933-40. Sir E Lutyens. Brick with granite facing. Facades to north and east and west. East facade is symmetrical, with three round headed windows, the central one mullioned and transomed and with large keystone. Two entrances have Tuscan aedicules with open pediments. West facade similar. North facade has five lunettes, round-headed entrances to ends.Interior of blue brick with red brick vaults and granite dressings. Two central circular spaces are flanked by the concert hall to west and Blessed Sacrament Chapel to east. Both have double aisles and end in three apses.

To north is the Community Hall and to South is the Pontifical Chapel. Chapel of Relics to south has three round headed recesses faced with marble containing Doric aedicules supporting chest tombs; pierced round stone serves as door (the "Rolling Gate") -The Crypt was the only completed part of Lutyen's design for the Cathedral, and would have lain across the main axis, at the north (ritual E) end. An impressive fragment of what Lutyens thought would have been his greatest achievement.

Cathedral (added to List Entry in 1994):- competition held for its design 1959-60. Constructed 1962-67. Architect Frederick Gibberd. Concrete frame with ceramic mosaic cladding; walls clad in Portland stone; aluminium sheet covering to roof. Circular plan with central altar and perimeter chapels. Conical form with sixteen raking concrete supports linked by ring beams at the eaves and at the base of the stained glass and concrete lantern which crowns the building. Within each bay of the frame, except at the front, is set a stone clad chapel; these are varied in form, some with squared corners and some with rounded corners. They are separated from the frame by strips of stained glass. The front bay is occupied by an entrance porch of triangular section which rises away from the body of the church to form a cliff-like facade which houses four bells and is adorned with a symbolic relief by William Mitchell. To each side of the entrance are doors incorporating fibreglass reliefs, also by Mitchell. The sixteen vertical concrete members of the central lantern are each topped by tall metal pinnacles, linked by a delicate web of metal struts. Internally the walls are plastered.

The interior contains various fittings and fixtures of note, including the following:- The central lantern or'corona' is filled with stained glass by John Piper and Patrick Reyntiens, cemented together with epoxy resin and pre-cast within tracery of thin concrete ribs, a technique invented for the job.

The Sanctuary:- baldacchino by Gibberd; Crucifix by Elizabeth Frink; Altar Cross and Candlesticks by P Y Goodden.

The nave space:- Piper and Reyntiens stained glass framing the side chapels; curved benches by Frank Knight; geometrical floor pattern by David Atkins.

The Chapel of the Blessed Sacrament:- stained glass, reredos and tabernacle by Ceri Richards.

The Baptistry:-grey and black floor and bronze gates by David Atkins.

The Lady Chapel:- Madonna statue by Bob Brumby; stained glass by Margaret Traherne. The Chapel of St Paul of the Cross:- stained glass by Margaret Traherne. The Archbishop's Throne was designed by R D Russell.

Sources:- N Pevsner, South Lancashire; F Gibberd, Metropolitan Cathedral of Christ the King, Liverpool (1968); Architect and Building News 1960, 31 August, pp 265-70+ 228-9; Architectural Review, 1967 June pp 436-448.

Listing NGR: SJ3572090294


Selected Sources

Books and journals
Gibberd, F, Metropolitan Cathedral of Christ the King Liverpool, (1968)
Pevsner, N, The Buildings of England: South Lancashire, (1969)
'The Architect and Building News' in 31 August, (1960), 265-270
'The Architect and Building News' in 31 August, (1960), 228-229
'Architectural Review' in June, (1967), 436-448

Map

National Grid Reference: SJ 35694 90204


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This copy shows the entry on 27-Apr-2024 at 01:32:07.