Stephen Joseph Studio | |
---|---|
Former names | German Protestant Church, Greenheys |
General information | |
Architectural style | Neo-Gothic |
Location | Chorlton on Medlock |
Coordinates | 53°27′49.46″N 2°14′3.73″W / 53.4637389°N 2.2343694°W |
Construction started | 1871 (?) |
Completed | Prior to 1895[1] |
Owner | University of Manchester |
The Stephen Joseph Studio is a former German Protestant Church, now part of the University of Manchester,[2] in Greenheys, Manchester, England. It used to lie on Wright Street (off Ducie Street),[1] a street which no longer exists (grid reference SJ845963).[1] It was mentioned in the Manchester Directory for 1858, with the pastor's name H. E. Marotsky (Hermann Eduard Marotsky); it should not be confused with the German Church in John Dalton Street, established by Joseph Steinthal in 1854.[3] It was first occupied by the university in 1949 and had various uses before its use by the Department of Drama.[4]
The main entrance lies on the west side of the building, with a side entrance on the north. The east side features a rose window. The building houses seven lecture rooms, with space for up to 179 students.[5] It is named after Stephen Joseph, the pioneer of theatre in the round. Since the late 1970s the Mansfield Cooper Building has stood to the south-west.