(on the right) The many visitors to Buxton for its thermal waters, particularly in the 18th and 19th centuries, led to several new buildings to provide hospitality facilities. The
Old Hall Hotel is one of the town's oldest buildings. It was owned by
George Talbot, 6th Earl of Shrewsbury, who with his wife, Bess of Hardwick, acted as the "gaolers" of Mary, Queen of Scots, who came to Buxton several times to take the waters, her final visit being in 1584. The present building dates from 1670, and has a five-bay front with a
Tuscan doorway. The Grade I listed Crescent was built in 1780–1784 for the 5th Duke of Devonshire, as part of his effort to turn Buxton into a fashionable spa town. Modelled on Bath's
Royal Crescent, it was designed by architect
John Carr, together with the neighbouring irregular octagon and colonnade of the Great Stables. These were completed in 1789, but in 1859 were largely converted to a charity hospital for the "sick poor" by
Henry Currey, architect to the
7th Duke of Devonshire's. Currey had previously worked on
St Thomas' Hospital in London. It became known as the
Devonshire Royal Hospital in 1934. Later phases of conversion after 1881 were by local architect
Robert Rippon Duke, including his design for The
Devonshire Dome as the world's largest unsupported
dome, with a diameter of – larger than the
Pantheon at ,
St. Peter's Basilica at in
Rome, and
St Paul's Cathedral at . The record was surpassed only by
space frame domes such as the
Georgia Dome (). The building and its surrounding Victorian villas are now part of the
University of Derby. , and
Brian Clarke's modern stained glass canopy over the Cavendish Arcade Currey also designed the Grade II listed
Buxton Baths, comprising the Natural Mineral Baths to the west of The Crescent and Buxton Thermal Baths to the east, which opened in 1854 on the site of the original Roman baths, together with the 1894 Pump Room opposite. The Thermal Baths, closed in 1963 and at risk of demolition, were restored and converted into a shopping arcade by conservation architects Derek Latham and Company. Architectural artist
Brian Clarke contributed to the refurbishment; his scheme, designed in 1984 and completed in 1987, was for a landmark modern artwork, a barrel-vaulted modern stained glass ceiling to enclose the former baths — at the time the largest stained glass window in the British Isles — creating an atrial space for what became the Cavendish Arcade. Visitors could "take the waters" at The Pump Room until 1981. Between 1981 and 1995 the building housed the Buxton Micrarium Exhibition, an interactive display with 50 remote-controlled microscopes. The building was refurbished as part of the
National Lottery-funded Buxton Crescent and Thermal Spa re-development. Beside it, added in 1940, is
St Ann's Well. In October 2020 Ensana reopened the Crescent as a 5-star spa hotel, after a 17-year refurbishment. Nearby stands the imposing monument to Samuel Turner (1805–1878), treasurer of the Devonshire Hospital and Buxton Bath Charity, built in 1879 and accidentally lost for the latter part of the 20th century during construction work, before being found and restored in 1994. When the railways arrived in Buxton in 1863,
Buxton railway station had been designed by
Joseph Paxton, previously gardener and architect to William Cavendish, 6th Duke of Devonshire. Paxton also contributed the layout of the Park Road circular estate. He is perhaps known best for his design of
the Crystal Palace in London.
Buxton Town Hall, designed by William Pollard, was completed in 1889.
Other architecture Buxton Opera House, designed by
Frank Matcham in 1903, is the highest opera-house site in the country. Matcham, a theatre architect, was responsible for several
London theatres, including the
London Palladium, the
London Coliseum and the
Hackney Empire. Opposite is an original
Penfold octagonal post box. The opera house is attached to the Pavilion Gardens, Octagonal Hall (built in 1875) and the smaller
Pavilion Arts Centre (previously The Hippodrome and the Playhouse Theatre.).
Buxton Pavilion Gardens, designed by
Edward Milner, contain 93,000 m2 of gardens and ponds and were opened in 1871. These form a Grade II* listed public park of Special Historic Interest. Milner's design was a development of
Joseph Paxton's landscape for the Serpentine Walks in the 1830s. The 122-room
Palace Hotel, also designed by Currey and built in 1868, is a prominent feature of the Buxton skyline on the hill above the railway station. are listed buildings reflecting the historic character of the town, although many buildings have been demolished.
Lost buildings of Buxton include grand spa hotels, the Midland Railway station, the Picture House cinema and Cavendish Girls' Grammar School. == Culture ==