File:Manchester Art Gallery - geograph.org.uk - 1748756.jpg|The
Manchester Art Gallery File:Portico Library.jpg|
The Portico Library, on the corner of Charlotte Street File:38 and 42 Mosley Street, Manchester 4 straight.JPG|
38 and 42 Mosley Street File:One New York Street.JPG|
1 New York Street ;East side • The
Portico Library on the corner of Charlotte Street was Manchester's first subscription library, built in the
Classical style between 1802 and 1806 by
Thomas Harrison of
Chester. It was altered to become a bank and library in the 1920s and is now a public house and library.
John Dalton described its location as in "the most elegant and retired street in town". • The Royal Manchester Institution, now
Manchester Art Gallery, was designed by
Charles Barry and built between 1824 and 1835. It is built in the Greek
Ionic style in
rusticated sandstone
ashlar. It is a Grade II* Listed building. • Red brick offices and a trade warehouse (nos. 77, 77a; 14 & 16 Princess Street) built on the south corner of Princess Street around 1860–70 are occupied by a bank and offices and are Grade II listed. ;West side • At 10 Mosley Street, the bank, later
Williams Deacon's and
Bradford & Bingley was built in the
Classical style for the Manchester and Salford Bank in 1836 by Richard Tattershall. It is constructed in sandstone
ashlar under a slate roof and is Grade II listed. • Shops and offices on a corner site at 12 Mosley Street were built in an eclectic
neo-Gothic style between 1870 and 1880. The building has an
iron frame clad in
sandstone ashlar and a slate roof. It is Grade II listed. • Harvest House at 14 and 16 Mosley Street was built as a textile warehouse for
Richard Cobden in 1839 by
Edward Walters in the Italian
palazzo style in red brick in
Flemish bond with sandstone dressings and is Grade II listed. It was later altered to become shops. • The Grade II Colwyn Chambers at Mosley Street's junction with York Street was built for the Lancashire Mercantile Bank in 1898 by J. Gibbons Sankey and is now occupied by shops, a restaurant and offices. • At
38 and 42 Mosley Street is a bank built in 1862 in the Italian
palazzo style which was the last great work of
Edward Walters. Now occupied by the Royal Bank of Scotland it was built for the Manchester and Salford Bank and extensions around 1880 were carried out by Walters' successors, Barker and Ellis. The bank is built in ashlar under slate roofs. ==See also==