In the late 19th century meetings of Bridlington Borough Council were held in the courtroom on the first floor of the Bayle Gate. After civic leaders found this arrangement inadequate, they acquired a private house in Quay Road known as the "White Lodge" which had been owned by the Lamplugh family and built in the 1830s: the house served as the council's municipal building until the early 1930s when it was demolished to make way for the new town hall. The foundation stone for the new building was laid by the mayor, Alderman H. Harker, on 24 September 1931. It was designed by the borough surveyor, Percy Maurice Newton, in the
neoclassical style and was officially opened by the mayor, Councillor J. A. Dew on 13 May 1932. The design involved a symmetrical main frontage with fifteen bays facing the corner of Quay Road and Station Avenue with the end bays slightly projected forward; the central section of five bays, which also slightly projected forward, featured a full-height
tetrastyle portico with a doorway on the ground floor and a balcony and French doors on the first floor flanked by four
Corinthian order columns supporting an open pediment containing the town's
coat of arms. Internally, the principal rooms were the council chamber on the ground floor in the south wing and the ballroom on the ground floor in the north wing as well as the mayor's parlour. East Yorkshire Borough Council was abolished in 1996 and the building passed to its successor,
East Riding of Yorkshire Council, which has its headquarters at
County Hall, Beverley, but continues to use Bridlington Town Hall as an area office. The council chamber was the venue for the public inquiry in 2003 into the possible creation of a marina for the town, which would have included a conference centre, luxury flats, retail developments and a yacht club as well as berths for 500 yachts: the inquiry recommended that the scheme should not proceed because of environmental concerns. The concept was resurrected when plans for a smaller scheme, with berths for just 250 yachts, were unveiled in November 2015. In November 2016 the council announced a programme of works to convert the council chamber into a flexible space for meetings and to convert the ballroom into a new hub for job seekers. The offices on the first floor, which are occupied by staff from various departments of
East Riding of Yorkshire Council, were unaffected by the changes. ==References==