Until the mid-19th century, there was no venue for public meetings in the town: meetings of the ancient borough council, which consisted of a
portreeve, 12
aldermen and several
burgesses, were held in rooms in local inns. The borough council therefore decided to commission a dedicated town hall and to finance it by public subscription. The site the borough leaders selected was opposite
Loughor Castle. The new building was designed by Henry Davies of
Llanelli in the
neoclassical style, built in
rubble masonry at a cost of £300 and was completed in 1868. The original design involved a symmetrical main frontage of two bays facing onto Castle Street. It was fenestrated with
casement windows with
window sills,
voussoirs and
keystones on the ground floor and with
sash windows in the same style on the first floor. At the west end there was an external staircase leading up to a first-floor
porch, formed by a pair of
cast iron columns supporting an
entablature, and there was a small
Diocletian window in the gable above. Internally, there were prison cells and police accommodation on the ground floor, which was accessed through a doorway underneath the external staircase, and there was an assembly room, which was also used for the
assizes, on the first floor. Its assets, including the building, were transferred to a specially-formed entity, the Loughor Town Trust, in 1890. The building was subsequently used as a community events venue and the Loughor Community Association held its meetings in the town hall until 1935 when the Loughor Community Hall in Woodlands Road was completed. The assembly room on the first floor was subsequently converted for residential use and remained in that use until 2011. After the Loughor Town Trust was unable to secure a new resident, the whole building was then vacated and boarded up. In 2017, the Loughor Town Trust confirmed that it was seeking funding to restore the building, and was considering options including residential, community and business uses. == References ==