10 things you didn’t know about The Old Marylebone Town Hall
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We are very proud of our building and its heritage and we love working here every day and each wedding, naming ceremony and vows renewal brings a new excitement to fill the halls with celebration.
Here are 10 facts you may not know about our fabulous building and what we do:
- Following a competition in 1911, Sir Edwin Cooper was commissioned to design the town hall.
- The building, in Marylebone Road was built 1914–20. The building is faced with Portland stone and is an example of Edwardian Graeco-Roman classicism, with a tower in the style of Christopher Wren and fluted columns.
- The Westminster room is the most popular ceremony room followed by the Soho Room
- In some of the ceremony rooms hidden figures in the ceiling work. See if you can spot them!
- You don’t have to exchange rings at your ceremony, you can exchange other symbols of commitment…within reason!
- You can have a dog as your ring bearer.
- The Old Marylebone Town Hall is a Grade II listed building.
- The 7 ceremony rooms are named after different parts of the borough; Westminster, Knightsbridge, Paddington, Marylebone, Soho, Pimlico and Mayfair.
- The building was formally opened by HRH Prince Albert (later King George VI) on 27th March 1920.
- 120,00 marriages took place at The Old Marylebone Town Hall between 1920 and its closure for refurbishment in 2013 .
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