155 years of dirt and grime – removed in eight days.

Location

Shoreditch Town Hall, 380 Old St, London EC1V 9LT

Listing

Grade II listed building

Substrate

Portland stone

Surface area

1,500 sq. m.

Project duration

8 days

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“More light, more power”

Shoreditch Town Hall facade cleaning by Thomann Hanry® – first exterior clean in 155 years

With a colourful history, surviving a huge fire and two world wars, today Shoreditch Town Hall is a destination arts, events and community space, having been rescued from the brink in the late 1990s. Its recent renaissance culminated in April 2021 with a complete façade clean by Thomann-Hanry® remarkably, the first exterior clean since it was built. In the process, this magnificent grade II listed building has been restored to its original splendour, turning the clock back some 155 years.

Building history

Designed in Italianate style by Caesar Augustus Long and built in 1866, later to be extended in Edwardian baroque by William G Hunt at the turn of the 20th century, Shoreditch Town Hall is amongst London’s finest examples of grand civic architecture. Adorned with its iconic statue of Progress, the building exemplifies the purposeful optimism of the era, its “More light, more power” motto – carved beneath the Shoreditch crest – encapsulating this forward-looking ethos.

From its opening in 1866, the Town Hall was the hub of local democracy and civic life for over a century. Its status as a political focal point was underlined by the arrest there of suffragette Sylvia Pankhurst in 1913. The Town Hall was also a hugely popular Music Hall venue from the late 19th century to the early 20th century, in spite of a catastrophic fire in 1904.

Hosting the first ever televised boxing match in 1955, it then became best known as a major boxing venue until 1975. Its subsequent decline into neglect during the 1980s was a sad fate for such a proud building with such a colourful history. In 1996 Shoreditch Town Hall was added to the English Heritage “Buildings at Risk” register, prompting a campaign to save this historic East London landmark.

The Shoreditch Town Hall Trust took over the lease in 2002, marking a turning point in the building’s history. With £2.3 million of capital investment, it has since been transformed, realising a dynamic vision for one of London’s most important new arts, events and community spaces.

Shoreditch Town Hall facade cleaning works

In Spring of 2021, Thomann-Hanry® were commissioned to clean the Town Hall’s imposing Portland stone façade. With post-lockdown audiences due to return in June, it was important that the building should not be shrouded in scaffolding for months on end. For this reason façade gommage®, patented by Thomann-Hanry®, was the perfect solution. With all cleaning carried out from an agile hydraulic cabin, the entire 1500 square metre façade was cleaned by the four-man team in just eight days without a single pole of scaffolding to be seen. Projecting fine powders under low pressure across the contours of the façade, over a century and a half of accumulated dirt and grime were gently lifted away, revealing the face of the building as it first appeared in 1866.

James Pidgeon, Director & Chief Executive of Shoreditch Town Hall, observed:

“It has long been an ambition of ours to properly clean and give some attention to the façade of our much-loved landmark building, and so I’m delighted that we’re now able to start these works ahead of welcoming audiences back. The clean will no doubt have a transformative impact on the public’s perception of the Town Hall, and is a fitting and timely reminder of our presence and future ambition as we fully emerge from the horror of the last 12 months and continue to serve artistic and local communities in Shoreditch, Hackney and beyond.”

Check us out whilst working to bring the Town Hall facade back to life:

 

 

Contact us for more details.

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