Merseyside Centre for the Deaf
The Merseyside Centre for the Deaf, formerly the Adult Deaf and Dumb Institute, is an 1887 Grade II listed building on Princes Avenue in Liverpool, England.
In 2018 it was named by the Victorian Society as a heritage building at risk of disrepair.[1] Initially built as a chapel for the Merseyside deaf community, the society said the "once grand" gothic structure was now in a "terrible state". For 20 years after it closed in 1986 it was run as a successful community centre for the local Igbo community but rising costs forced them out in 2007.[2]
The Merseyside Society for Deaf People (MSDP) is now a charity situated on Queens Drive retail park, west Derby. It has over 30 staff providing services across Merseyside,[3] and moved into a new building in 2017.
References
[edit]- ^ "Victorian Society reveals top 10 buildings 'crying out' to be saved". BBC News. 12 September 2018.
- ^ Nikolaus Pevsner, Lancashire: Liverpool and the Southwest - Page 79 0300109105 Richard Pollard, Joseph Sharples - 2006 In the city centre there was the octagonal-plan Adult Deaf and Dumb Institute, Princes Avenue, 1886-7, by E.H. Banner.
- ^ "History". MSDP. Retrieved 10 October 2019.
53°23′42″N 2°57′51″W / 53.3950°N 2.9643°W
https://apps.charitycommission.gov.uk/Accounts/Ends21/0001065021_AC_20180930_E_C.pdf