St George's Hall
Landmark
About St George's Hall
St George's Hall is Liverpool's grandest Victorian statement piece, a massive neoclassical courthouse and concert hall that'll make you feel like you've wandered into ancient Rome. You're here for two main attractions: the Great Hall with its legendary Minton floor (30,000 hand-painted tiles that stay covered 360 days a year), and the circular Concert Room where Dickens gave readings and the acoustics are so perfect you can hear a whisper from across the room. The building also houses original Victorian courtrooms and holding cells that feel authentically grim.
Walking through feels like exploring a temple that someone forgot to finish. The Great Hall stretches 169 feet with massive columns and a barrel-vaulted ceiling that echoes your footsteps. Most of the time you'll be walking on protective covering, knowing those incredible tiles lie beneath. The Concert Room hits differently, completely circular with carved wood and perfect sound that makes you want to test it immediately. The old courtrooms upstairs feel frozen in time, complete with original dock and judge's bench.
Honestly, it's spectacular but timing matters everything. If the Minton floor isn't uncovered, you're missing 70% of what makes this special. Free entry is brilliant, but the building can feel empty and echoing when quiet. Skip the basement cells unless you're really into Victorian prison conditions, they're more depressing than educational. The audio guide costs £3 and actually adds value here.
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