Commercial Buildings: Engraved for Smyth's Belfast Directory (Hogg Collection/ NMNI) |
"WHERE the Commercial Buildings now stand, there were, in the year 1800, a row of low cottages, thatched with straw. This has been affirmed by respectable persons who saw them. They have been mentioned the names of those who lived, or had their places of business, in them; these were Thomas McCabe, Valentine Joyce, Russell, and others."
Thus wrote George Benn, the Belfast historian, in 1880.
The United Irishman Samuel Neilson (1761-1803) is said to have occupied one of the cottages.
Commercial Buildings are located at the corner of Waring Street and Bridge Street in Belfast.
Construction of the Buildings began on St Patrick's Day, 1819, when the foundation stone was laid by GEORGE, 2ND MARQUESS OF DONEGALL KP.
Commercial Buildings from Donegall Street painted by W A Maguire ca 1830-30 (NMNI) |
The designer was John McCutcheon, the architect who oversaw the erection of Royal Belfast Academical Institution five years previously, in 1814.
The building is said to have cost £20,000 to build, equivalent to about £2 million in 2021.
Commercial Buildings remain in splendid condition to this day, doubtless due to its construction with Dublin granite.
The ground-floor stonework is rusticated, with arched window apertures.
Decorative feature (Timothy Ferres. 2022) |
There is a pair of Doric porches in the Waring Street elevation, which clearly terminates the vista from Donegall Street.
The most prominent features of this elevation are eight large Ionic columns, paired at each end.
Directly above these columns is a date stone inscribed with the Roman numerals "MDCCCXX."
(Timothy Ferres, 2022) |
The Historic Buildings database of the Northern Ireland Department of Communities has already written a comprehensive document about Commercial Buildings, including the fact that the Northern Whig newspaper acquired the property and operated there from 1919 until 1963.
Marcus Patton, OBE, in his Historical Gazetteer of Belfast (1993), also includes the Commercial Buildings on pages 326-7.
Bridge Street façade in 1942 (Belfast Telegraph/NMNI |
High Street and Bridge Street suffered catastrophic damage caused by bombing during the Blitz in 1941; and as a consequence of this the Bridge Street elevation of Commercial Buildings was virtually destroyed.
The Waring Street frontage, however, remained largely unscathed.
Prospect from Donegall Street in 2022 (Timothy Ferres) |
The historic buildings database remarks:
"With the closure of the news-press in 1963, the former Northern Whig headquarters was reconverted into commercial office space; the structure was listed in 1975. Utilised as office space for over three decades the Northern Whig was purchased by the Botanic Inns in 1997 who converted the majority of the building into a licensed restaurant and bar called ‘The Northern Whig;’ a portion of the upper floor continues to be utilised as office space."
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