Verdin County Grammar School
Built in 1895 and designed by Manchester architects Woodhouse & Willoughby in a striking ‘Netherlandish Renaissance’ style. Money for construction of the school was supplied by local industrialist Sir Joseph Verdin, who - along with his family - were at the time owners of the largest salt manufacturers in the United Kingdom, producing over 300,000 tonnes annually.
The school went through several names over the years;
Verdin Technical School
Verdin Higher Elementary School
Verdin County School
Verdin Grammar School
More recently operated as part of Mid-Cheshire College as the ‘Verdin Centre’.
Its last use was a council-run small-business start-up centre called the ‘Verdin Exchange’.
Only had a limited amount of time here coz my mate was outside freezing her ass off having not fancied the entry, so I just made my way towards the oldest bits. There was definitely a good chunk I didn’t see, including a gymnasium.
When it was new
Currently... Not much change!
Apart from some large mid-century additions
Inside the 2 main entrances, presumably one for girls and one for boys. Both had nice tiled floors.
I guess this was once the assembly hall, more recently repurposed as a library
Some pigeon-smashed stained glass
The rest of the gaff was just nice corridors and chopped up former classrooms
Not a bad little wander, bit empty but not a suspended ceiling in sight!
Built in 1895 and designed by Manchester architects Woodhouse & Willoughby in a striking ‘Netherlandish Renaissance’ style. Money for construction of the school was supplied by local industrialist Sir Joseph Verdin, who - along with his family - were at the time owners of the largest salt manufacturers in the United Kingdom, producing over 300,000 tonnes annually.
The school went through several names over the years;
Verdin Technical School
Verdin Higher Elementary School
Verdin County School
Verdin Grammar School
More recently operated as part of Mid-Cheshire College as the ‘Verdin Centre’.
Its last use was a council-run small-business start-up centre called the ‘Verdin Exchange’.
Only had a limited amount of time here coz my mate was outside freezing her ass off having not fancied the entry, so I just made my way towards the oldest bits. There was definitely a good chunk I didn’t see, including a gymnasium.
When it was new
Currently... Not much change!
Apart from some large mid-century additions
Inside the 2 main entrances, presumably one for girls and one for boys. Both had nice tiled floors.
I guess this was once the assembly hall, more recently repurposed as a library
Some pigeon-smashed stained glass
The rest of the gaff was just nice corridors and chopped up former classrooms
Not a bad little wander, bit empty but not a suspended ceiling in sight!
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