This website uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website.

Back to Search page

Bradford Railway Hotels

Two large Victorian railway hotels still stand in the centre of Bradford, relics of the railway age. Both are listed Grade II.
Region:
West Yorkshire
Red Wheel Site:
No
Transport Mode(s):
Rail
Address:
Midland Hotel, Forster Square, Bradford, BD1 4HU

Great Victoria Hotel, Bridge Street, BD1 1JN

Postcode:
BD1 4HU
Visitor Centre:
No
Website:

About Bradford Railway Hotels

The Midland Hotel was part of a complex consisting of passenger and goods stations and the hotel, built in 1890. It is a four storey building with attics and a Mansard roof. A five sided turret over the main entrance rises to a dome which complemented that over the station. It was designed by Charles Trubshaw, the Midland's architect. It is listed Grade II.

The Great Victoria Hotel was built in 1867 by a local company and bought by the the Great Northern Railway in 1892. It is opposite Exchange Station which it shared with the Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway. Also four storeys high it is in sandstone with French style pavilion roofs.

They stand as a monument to railway competition whereby Bradford has inherited two terminal stations within a short walk of one another, facing in opposite directions.

Both are in the centre of Bradford near their respective railway stations.

Biddle, Gordon, Britain's Historic Railway Buildings, Oxford University Press, ISBN-10: 0198662475 (2003)

Carter, Oliver. An Illustrated History of British Railway Hotels 1838-1938. (1990)

Pevsner, Nicholaus. The Buildings of England: Yorkshire West Riding (1959)

Sheeran, George. The Buildings of Bradford. (2005)

Sheeran, George. Railway Buildings of West Yorkshire 1812- 1920. (1994)

National Transport Trust, Old Bank House, 26 Station Approach, Hinchley Wood, Esher, Surrey KT10 0SR