Architecture The chapel was designed by
Sir Charles Barry, shortly before he designed the
Palace of Westminster (Houses of Parliament). It was constructed between 1837 and 1839 out of
sandstone, with a
slate roof. It is in English
Gothic Revival style. The building has seven narrow bays, with
buttresses and a
lancet in each bay. The west end has a giant moulded
archway, with an arched doorway at the ground floor with a window above. On the east end there is a
rose window. The corners are square, with
pinnacles. The inside of the chapel had
galleries on three sides, and a ribbed,
vaulted ceiling. The attached two-storey
Sunday School is in the same style as the chapel, and has a triple-
gabled north side, with large arched windows on the first floor. It also has a canted
apse on the west end, and a
lean-to porch. The building marked a charge in the style of Nonconformist worship locations. Previously these were mostly built with
brick, and were plain, with the grander tending towards
Greek architecture. Said to be the first Neogothic
Nonconformist chapel, Manchester's Unitarian Chapel was preceded by the
Congregational Chapel in
March, Cambridgeshire, which was constructed in 1836 and is also in the Neogothic style. Chapels built following the construction of these two resembled
parish churches more than the former style. The building was
listed on 3 October 1974, and is currently classed as Grade II*. ==Occupancy==