
New Market Buildings Bridgnorth Photo: Christopher Ollivier
Added to the Victorian Society’s Top Ten Endangered Buildings list in 2026
Grade II, Robert Griffiths of Quatford, 1855 -1859
Prominently positioned on Bridgnorth’s High Street, the New Market Hall is a striking polychromatic Italianate building and a rare survival of a high-status Victorian commercial structure. While comparable market halls in nearby towns such as Shrewsbury and Ludlow have been lost, Bridgnorth’s example endures, though does so now in a perilous condition.
Built between 1855 and 1859, the market hall was commissioned by the Borough Board of Health, established following the Public Health Act of 1848. In partnership with a private company, it was intended as a multi-functional civic hub, combining market space with offices, public rooms, a town hall and assembly rooms. Its bold architecture reflected the ambition of Victorian urban improvement schemes.
Despite this vision, the building struggled from the outset. Local traders resisted moving indoors, preferring to continue selling in the open market square. Attempts by the authorities to enforce the change led to conflict, including the confiscation of goods and legal action by traders, who successfully defended their traditional rights. As a result, the building was repurposed multiple times over its history, serving as offices, stores, workshops, and later retail and community uses. In the 20th century it housed, among other things, a supermarket and a Museum of Childhood.
Today, the building is in very poor condition. Although the ground floor remains partially occupied, the upper levels are vacant and deteriorating. A scheme approved in 2014 to convert the building into a hotel was never implemented, and the absentee owners have taken no meaningful steps to halt its decline. The rear wing is particularly at risk, and emergency scaffolding installed by the local authority in 2022 remains in place, imposing an ongoing financial burden on the council.

Scaffolding around the New Market Buildings Bridgnorth Photo: Christopher Ollivier
Local concern is growing. Community groups have called for stronger action, including the possibility of compulsory purchase, and there is clear appetite to see the building brought back into active use, potentially as a cultural or community space. Without decisive intervention, however, this important landmark faces continued deterioration.

Roof damage. The New Market Hall Bridgnorth. Photo: Rachel Hadley
The Victorian Society is urging the owners either to bring forward a viable scheme without further delay or to place the building on the market to allow a new custodian to secure its future. At the heart of a thriving town, this is a building that should once again play a central role in civic life.

The New Market Hall Bridgnorth. Photo: Rachel Hadley
Griff Rhys Jones, Victorian Society President, said: ‘‘No, no no. Come on. They are building huge enclosed shopping centres which threaten the high street and here is a purpose made building on the high street standing by and perfect for small shops, cafes and a new life. This is the centre of town. This is the centre of urban life. Stand by and make something of it.”
James Hughes, Director of the Victorian Society, said: “This is a building that was designed to serve the heart of Bridgnorth, and could do so again. With the right vision and commitment, it could once again be a focal point for the town. What is needed now is decisive action to secure its future before further damage is done.”
The full Top Ten Endangered Buildings list for 2026 of Victorian and Edwardian buildings, and the archive of our previous Top Ten lists, can be viewed here.

Roof view, The New Market Hall Bridgnorth. Photo: Rachel Hadley