Pubs Historic pubs in Norwood include: • Bath Hotel, on the southeast corner of the Parade and Queen Street, was designed by
Thomas English and built around 1881 to 1883. It replaced two earlier buildings, the original having been licensed in 1857 and rebuilt after a fire in 1877. A balcony on the Parade facade was removed in 1960. and underwent a major renovation in 2006. It underwent significant refurbishments in the 1870s, and an upper storey was constructed in 1911. It was locally heritage-listed in August 2000. • Norwood Hotel, situated on the northeast corner of the Parade and Osmond Terrace, was designed by Charles Howard Marryat and completed in 1884, built by C.H.F. Boehm. Considered too elaborate at that time, it was described in a 1984 heritage assessment as an "imposing and solid example of largely intact high
Victorian architecture", and was heritage-listed on the
South Australian Heritage Register in September 1990. An earlier building, known as the Norwood Arms, was a single-storey building built in 1848, and the first pub in Norwood. The first meeting of the Kensington and Norwood Council was held in it. locally heritage-listed in August 2000 • Robin Hood Hotel, 315 Portrush Road, present building built 1882 to replace an earlier one licensed in 1845; locally heritage-listed in August 2000
Other buildings •
Norwood Town Hall was
heritage-listed on the
SA Heritage Register in November 1985. • Norwood Library is located on 110 The Parade, near the corner of Osmond Terrace, in the old Kensington and Norwood Institute building, which was
heritage-listed in 1981 on the
South Australian Heritage Register. The institute, designed by government architect W. H. Abbott free of charge, and built in 1876, was one of many
mechanics' institutes in Australia established during the 19th century. It was largely funded by its founding president, Sir
Edwin Smith. In 1882 its collection, available for loan by subscriptions paid by members, was enhanced by books acquired from the Magill Institute after its demise. In 1883 extensions were added to the building, including a hall and reading room, and in 1895 it also had a musical program. In 1914 the library held 13,744 volumes, and 190 periodicals and newspapers, and an art school was opened in the building. In the 1950s the Institute supported the free lending of books, but fell into debt to the council. In 1977 the
City of Kensington and Norwood acquired the building, and carried out renovations, retaining the library. In 1986 the institute was dissolved, setting up a Friends of the Library group as the building becoming the responsibility of the council. The building was refurbished in period style and became Norwood Library. was heritage-listed on the SA Heritage Register in 1982. Its
classical style was particularly influenced by the
Metropolitan Tabernacle in
Newington Butts in London, where influential
Baptist preacher
Charles Spurgeon used to preach. The building contains one of the most significant
church organs in South Australia, installed in 1882. Its use as a church ceased and for some time it housed the
Mary Martin Bookshop, but that closed in the 2010s and has since been used as a restaurant. ==Churches==