The original venue for judicial hearings in Gloucester was the Booth Hall in Westgate Street which dated from the mid-16th century. However, it was also used as an entertainment venue and, by the early 19th century, it became necessary to commission a dedicated courthouse. The building was designed by
Sir Robert Smirke in the
neoclassical style, built in
ashlar stone and opened in August 1816. The design involved a symmetrical main frontage in the form of a
polygon of nine equal sides facing onto Bearland. The central bay featured a
portico, which was projected forward, contained a round headed doorway with a
fanlight and was surmounted by a
parapet; it was flanked by single-storey porters' offices on either side. The main two-storey structure behind was fenestrated by plain
sash windows on the ground floor and by alternating round headed windows and round headed blind recesses on the first floor, and was surmounted by a parapet. The separate courtrooms enabled
nisi prius i.e. civil cases and criminal cases to be tried simultaneously, and the gallery could accommodate 400 people. The building was used for the
assizes and for the
court of quarter sessions and, following implementation of the
Courts Act 1971, for hearings of the Crown Court. Notable cases have included the trial and conviction in April 2021, of the footballer,
Shayne Bradley, for stalking his girlfriend. They have also included the trial and conviction of teenager, Harley Demmon, in November 2021, for the murder of another teenager, Josh Hall. ==See also==