In 1907,
Royal Liver Assurance was in need for larger premises and approved the construction of a new head office. The foundation stone was laid on 11 May 1908. The building was designed by
Walter Aubrey Thomas in the
Edwardian Baroque style and built by
Edmund Nuttall Limited. The building is an early example of a building constructed using
reinforced concrete, and given the building's radical design was considered by some to "be impossible to build". The building was officially opened by
Lord Sheffield on 19 July 1911. In 1953, electronic chimes were installed to serve as a memorial to the members of Royal Liver Assurance who died during the two World Wars. The building remained the head office for Royal Liver Assurance until its merger with
Royal London Group in 2011. In October 2016, the building was put up for sale for the first time in its history. The owner instructed
CBRE Group to list the sale with a guide price of more than £40m. In February 2017, Luxembourg-based investment group, Corestate Capital, bought the building for £48 million along with
Everton F.C. majority shareholder
Farhad Moshiri. Moshiri planned to run Everton's affairs from the building and have his own office to include a view of the new stadium on
Bramley Moore Dock. In 2019, as part of a larger repositioning of the building, a visitor attraction was opened giving the public the chance to tour the West Clock Tower of the building on a regular basis for the first time in its then 108 year history. The Liver Building was sold again in 2025, with long-term tenant
Princes Group purchasing the building for £60 million. ==Description==