Built in
Brutalist architectural style between 1968 and 1969, designed by Keith Ingham and Charles Wilson of
Building Design Partnership with E. H. Stazicker, it had (until 2017) a capacity of 80
double-decker buses, 40 along each side of the building. Some claimed that it was the second largest
bus station in
Western Europe. Pedestrian access to the bus station was originally through any of three subways, one of which linked directly to the adjacent
Guild Hall, while the design also incorporates a
multi-storey car park of five floors with space for 1,100 cars. It has been described by the
Twentieth Century Society as "one of the most significant Brutalist buildings in the UK". The building's engineers,
Ove Arup & Partners, designed the distinctive curve of the car park balconies "after acceptable finishes to a vertical wall proved too expensive, contributing to the organic, sculptural nature of the building. The edges are functional, too, in that they protect car bumpers from crashing against a vertical wall. The cover balustrade protects passengers from the weather by allowing buses to penetrate beneath the lower parking floor." Built by
John Laing, it was opened on 22 October 1969 by the
chairman of
British Leyland. ==Threatened demolition==