After Paris, Lane moved to Manchester in 1821, was elected to membership of the
Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society on 26 April 1822, set up practice and was appointed Land Surveyor to the Police Commissioners of
Chorlton Row (as was). Much of Lane's work was on civic and governmental buildings, and he was commissioned to design a
town hall just off Chapel Street for the
Salford local government in 1825. In 1830, the Chorlton Row Police Commissioners – essentially the administrative body of the Chorlton Row
township – commissioned Lane to design a town hall on Cavendish Street. The Chorlton Town Hall was built by
David Bellhouse; Lane and Bellhouse would later work together on other projects. Indeed, Lane had a close connection with the Bellhouse family, and transferred his share in the
Portico Library to David Bellhouse's son, Edward Taylor Bellhouse, in 1834. The old town hall is now used by
Manchester Metropolitan University. Lane's notable ecclesiastical structures include the
Royal Chapel of St John the Baptist,
St John's, Isle of Man – built after Lane's design won an architectural competition set up by the church authorities – which is the national church of the Isle of Man, and functions as the seat of
parliament for
one day of the year; St George's Church, Chester Road (with
Francis Goodwin); the Church of St Mary with St Peter, Church Street, Oldham; and appropriately, the Friends' Meeting House, Mount Street, Manchester. Lane was one of the defendant architects in the landmark case
Foss v Harbottle (1843) 67 ER 189, which established the precedent that where a wrong is alleged to have been done to a company, the proper claimant is the company itself.
Manchester Architectural Society By the 1830s, Lane was Manchester's most prominent architect and in 1837, was one of the founders – and the first president – of the Manchester Architectural Society, the city's first architectural learned society. ==Students==