Theatres · Scottish Highlands
Queen's Hall
Queen's Hall is a theatre in the United Kingdom.

Thomas Nugent — CC BY-SA 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons licence
Plan your visit
- Typical visit
- 2 h–3 h
- Nearest railway station
- Inverkip · 5.6 km
- Wheelchair accessible
About
Queen's Hall is a working theatre in the United Kingdom, listed in OpenStreetMap as a public performance venue. Address: 7, Argyll Street, Dunoon, PA23 7HH. Coordinates: 55.9474°, -4.9241°.
Photo gallery
From the Wikipedia article
The Queen's Hall was a concert hall in Langham Place, London, opened in 1893. Designed by the architect Thomas Knightley, it had room for an audience of about 2,500 people. It became London's principal concert venue. From 1895 until 1941, it was the home of the promenade concerts ("The Proms") founded by Robert Newman together with Henry Wood. The hall had drab décor and cramped seating but superb acoustics. It became known as the "musical centre of the [British] Empire", and several of the leading musicians and composers of the late 19th and early 20th centuries performed there, including Claude Debussy, Edward Elgar, Maurice Ravel and Richard Strauss. In the 1930s, the hall became the main London base of two new orchestras, the BBC Symphony Orchestra and the London Philharmonic Orchestra. These two ensembles raised the standards of orchestral playing in London to new heights, and the hall's resident orchestra, founded in 1893, was eclipsed and it disbanded in 1930. The new orchestras attracted another generation of musicians from Europe and the United States, including Serge Koussevitzky, Willem Mengelberg, Arturo Toscanini, Bruno Walter and Felix Weingartner. In 1941, during the Second World War, the building was destroyed by incendiary bombs in the London Blitz. Despite much lobbying for the hall to be rebuilt, the government decided against doing so. The main musical functions of the Queen's Hall were taken over by the Royal Albert Hall for the Proms, and the new Royal Festival Hall for the general concert season.
Excerpt from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0. See the source article linked in Sources below.
Background
History
The site on which the hall was built was bounded by the present-day Langham Place, Riding House Street and Great Portland Street. In 1820 the land was bought by the Crown during the development of John Nash's Regent Street. Between then and the building of the hall, the site was first sublet to a coachmaker and stablekeeper, and in 1851 a bazaar occupied the site. In 1887, the leaseholder, Francis Ravenscroft, negotiated a building agreement with the Crown, providing for the clearing of the site and the erection of a new concert hall. The name of the new building was intended to be either the "Victoria Concert Hall" or the "Queen's Concert Hall". The name finally chosen, the "Queen's Hall",…
Architecture
Ravenscroft commissioned the architect Thomas Edward Knightley to design the new hall. Using a floor plan previously prepared by C. J. Phipps, Knightley designed a hall with a floor area of 21,000 square feet (2,000 m²) and an audience capacity of 2,500. Contemporary newspapers commented on the unusual elevation of the building, with the grand tier at street level, and the stalls and arena downstairs. , manager of the Queen's Hall Orchestra from 1893 to 1926]] The original decor consisted of grey and terracotta walls, Venetian red seating, large red lampshades suspended just above the orchestra's heads, mirrors surrounding the arena, and portraits of the leading composers to the sides of…
Sourced from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0.
- Coordinates
- 55.9474, -4.9241
- District
- Argyll and Bute
- Postcode
- PA23 7HH
- Parliamentary constituency
- Argyll, Bute and South Lochaber
- Established
- 1893
- Nearest railway station
- Inverkip — 5.6 km
Sources
- osm: w752173915 (ODbL)
- wikipedia: Queen's Hall (CC BY-SA 4.0)
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Frequently asked questions
- Where is Queen's Hall?
- Queen's Hall is in the Scottish Highlands, United Kingdom (postcode PA23 7HH).
- When was Queen's Hall built?
- Built or established in 1893.
- How do I get to Queen's Hall?
- The nearest railway station is Inverkip, about 5.6 km away. Drivers can navigate to postcode PA23 7HH.