Bargoed Town Hall
Bargoed Town Hall is a municipal building located on Hanbury Road, Bargoed in the Rhymney Valley in Wales. The town hall, which is the meeting place of Bargoed Town Council, is a Grade II listed building.
History
The older part of the complex is a police station constructed in 1904. A police court was subsequently erected to its left, the two joined by a cell block. The police court was designed by George Kenshole in the Beaux-Arts style and completed in 1911.One of the most shocking cases before the court was a trial in 1965 when a group of 11 young people went on trial on a total of 41 charges of assault and related activity at Bargoed railway station. One of the victims had suffered a broken leg. The crime was described as "an extreme example of gangsterism in the locality".
The complex was grade II listed in 1992. The courthouse closed in 1997, and it was then occasionally used as an annexe to the police station.
In 2012, the Gwent Police and Crime Commissioner, Ian Johnston, sought other organisations who were prepared to rent the former courthouse from Gwent Police. Meanwhile, Bargoed Town Council, which had been established in 1985 and had been based in a residential property known as The Settlement on Cardiff Road in Bargoed, had been seeking premises which would be more accessible for its residents. After a rental agreement had been entered into by the two parties, a programme of works was initiated to create a council chamber and an open plan office for the council within the former courthouse. The former courthouse was officially re-opened by the mayor of Bargoed, Howard Llewellyn, and the mayor of Caerphilly County Borough, David Carter, with Johnston also in attendance, on 28 June 2014.
In 2018, a painting by the artist, Olwen Hughes, depicting the Bargoed Emporium, was presented to the Gelligaer Historical Society and hung in the town hall. The emporium was a distinctive shop in the town, which had been completed in 1906.