Burnley Law Courts
Burnley Law Courts | |
---|---|
Location | Hammerton Street,Burnley |
Coordinates | 53°47′16″N2°14′50″W/ 53.7878°N 2.2473°W |
Built | 1981 |
Architect | Property Services Agency |
Architectural style(s) | Modernist style |
Burnley Law Courtsis aCrown Courtvenue, which deals with criminal cases, and aCounty Courtvenue, which deals with civil cases, in Hammerton Street,Burnley,England.
History
[edit]Until the early 1980s, criminal court hearings in Burnley were held in the courtroom inBurnley Town Hall.[1]However, as the number of court cases in Burnley grew, it became necessary to commission a more substantial courthouse for criminal court hearings. The site selected by theLord Chancellor's Departmenthad accommodated a series of rows of terraced housing (Mount Pleasant Street, Howarth Street and Whittam Street).[2]These streets had been part of the Weaver's Triangle area of Burnley and the buildings, which were in a poor state, were demolished in the 1930s.[3]
The new building was designed by theProperty Services Agencyin theModernist style,built in buff brick at a cost of £1.5 million,[4]and was opened in 1981.[5][6]The design involved an asymmetric main frontage in two sections facing onto Whittam Street. The left-hand section of four bays was well set back from the road: the right-hand bay, which was slightly projected forward, featured a four-door opening, surmounted by aRoyal coat of arms,with a smallcasement windowon the first floor. On the ground floor, the other bays in that section were fenestrated by casement windows and were separated bybuttresseswhich supported the first floor structure: the first floor structure wascantileveredout over the pavement, fenestrated with casement windows and clad in dark brown panels. The right-hand section was irregularly fenestrated with casement windows and featured acantedrecess, containing a single first-floor window, in the right-hand bay. Internally, the building was laid out to accommodate five courtrooms.[7]
In 2008, a member of a jury in a sex abuse case was dismissed, after she used a poll on herFacebookpage to help her to decide whether the defendant in the case was guilty or not guilty.[8]
Notable cases have included the trial and acquittal of the actor,Peter Adamson,in July 1983, on charges of indecent assault,[9][10]and the trial and conviction of another actor,Jody Latham,in December 2012, for growingcannabisin his garden: Latham was given a suspended prison sentence.[11][12][13]
References
[edit]- ^"Burnley Town Hall's £2.7m. four-year restoration".Burnley Express.5 December 2022.Retrieved4 March2023.
- ^"Ordnance Survey Map".1914.Retrieved4 March2023.
- ^"Mount Pleasant Street, Burnley".Red Rose Collections.Retrieved4 March2023.
- ^"Capital Building Programme".Hansard. 26 January 1996.Retrieved12 March2023.
- ^"Law Courts and Courtrooms 1: The Buildings of the Criminal Law".Historic England. 1 August 2016. p. 16.Retrieved4 March2023.
- ^Mulcahy, Linda; Rowden, Emma (2019).The Democratic Courthouse: A Modern History of Design, Due Process and Dignity.Taylor and Francis.ISBN978-0429558689.
- ^"Burnley".Ministry of Justice.Retrieved4 March2023.
- ^Brooks, Graham (2019).Criminal Justice and Corruption State Power, Privatization and Legitimacy.Springer International Publishing. p. 118.ISBN978-3030160388.
- ^"Actor never recovered from trial".The Globe and Mail.19 February 2002.Retrieved4 March2023.
- ^Thomas, Dave (2022).Director's Tale.Pitch Publishing.ISBN978-1801502382.
- ^"Ex-EastEnders star Jody Latham spared jail for cannabis production".BBC News.17 December 2012.Retrieved4 March2023.
- ^"Shameless and EastEnders star Jody Latham in court over cannabis farm".Manchester Evening News.15 August 2012.Retrieved4 March2023.
- ^"'Shameless' star Jodie Latham must pay back £1 after drugs case ".Burnley Express.28 May 2013.Retrieved4 March2023.