TQ3278 : Change in Walworth Road, Walworth, London
taken 9 years ago, near to Bermondsey, Southwark, England

The Walworth Town Hall building suffered extensive damage during the fire in March 2013; the adjacent Newington Library was also affected. Southwark Council are committed to respecting this historic building and developing new facilities for the community.
Following the fire, cabinet agreed a high-level vision for the future of the rebuilt building as a new, world class civic centre for Walworth. It will include:
• An enhanced Newington Library space.
• A space for the display of the Cuming collection and Southwark museum
• A flexible space that could be used for a variety of purposes including community and civic events, exhibitions and performances
• Facilities for marriage, civil partnership and citizenship ceremonies undertaken by the Southwark registrar’s service
See Link


History of Walworth Town Hall (from the site hoarding)
London’s second oldest Vestry Hall was designed by architect Henry Jarvis in an eclectic gothic style and built in 1864-66. At that time offices in the building included those for the Surveyor of Sewers and the Inspector of Nuisances!* In 1902 it was extended to include the east wing as the metropolitan boroughs came into power and their area of responsibility grew. Further alterations were made in the late 1940s and the 1960s. The building ceased to be the Southwark Town Hall in 1965 and was used for council offices and the charities commission.
*’Nuisances’ was a euphemism for waste of any kind deposited in public places such as the highway. It could be offal and bones from private slaughterhouses; it could be excrement, animal or human; it could refer to urination in public.
The former Public Health Centre at Southwark was one of a series of pioneering health centres built at the end of the 1930s, in advance of the 1946 National Health Services Act which made their construction a duty of health authorities. Its foundation stone was laid on 11 July 1936 and the building opened on 25 September 1937.
A plaque on the building's facade bears a powerful quotation translated from Cicero: “The health of the people is the highest law”. The new building brought all the borough's health services under one roof, prefiguring the integrated, cradle-to-grave ethos of the 1948 NHS. The sculptural group that crowns the facade is a striking emblem of the centre's focus on mothers and children in what was a deprived part of London in the interwar years.
The design, by the Borough Engineer Percy Smart, is admired for its external massing, jazzy, Deco-style detailing and good quality materials and craftsmanship. The rear part of the building appears now to be a training centre for jobseekers. The building appears in front of Newington Library in Stephen McKay’s long view TQ3278 : Walworth Road, Walworth.
The Walworth Clinic is listed Grade II; English Heritage has a full and interesting history and description at:
Link
This shared description is largely composed of extracts from it.
Original author: Robin Stott, 7 February 2015