Headingley Hill Congregational Church

Headingley Hill Congregational Church 
Viewed from Headingley Lane in 2020
Map
53°48′59″N 1°33′55″W / 53.8163°N 1.5654°W / 53.8163; -1.5654
OS grid referenceSE 287 356
DenominationUnited Reformed Church
History
Founded1864
Architecture
Functional statusAbandoned
Heritage designation
Listed Building – Grade II
Designated19 December 1975
Reference no.1255982
Architect(s)Cuthbert Brodrick
StyleGothic Revival
Completed1866
Specifications
MaterialsGritstone ashlar

Headingley Hill Congregational Church is a redundant Congregational church at the corner of Headingley Lane and Cumberland Road, in the Headingley area of Leeds, West Yorkshire, England. The church, which is a Grade II listed building, was designed in the Gothic Revival style by Cuthbert Brodrick and completed in 1866. It was the only church to have been designed by Brodrick, who is noted for Leeds Town Hall and the Corn Exchange.

Its congregation moved out in 1978 to merge with St Columba Presbyterian Church and form Headingley St Columba URC with a new building in the centre of Headingley. After this, Headingley Hill Congregational Church was converted to offices. It was returned to religious use in 1996 and renamed the Ashwood Centre, when the independent Pentecostal City Church bought the building and relocated there from the city centre. Due to falling congregations, this closed and it has been vacant since at least 2014, when it was offered for sale. Planning consent for conversion to flats was secured in 2018.


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