Central Quaker Meeting House
Central Quaker Meeting House is a purpose-built Quaker meeting house in Champion Square, St Jude's, Bristol, England. Completed in 1962 to replace the 18th-century Quakers Friars meeting house, it remains the principal place of worship for Central Bristol Quakers and is regularly used for community welfare projects.
History
Background
Bristol's first purpose-designed meeting house was erected in 1670 on the former Dominican friary site now known as Quakers Friars. That building was replaced in 1747–49 by a larger classical meeting house which served the Quakers until the mid-20th century, when Bristol City Council acquired the premises for redevelopment of Broadmead as the city's new shopping district. In 1956, Bristol Friends accepted municipal compensation and began planning the new meeting house on River Street.
Design and construction
Work on the new building was nearing completion by April 1962. The meeting house occupies the former burial ground, cleared in 1932, and stands next to the Grade II listed Quaker workhouse, now the New Street Flats. It is an L-shaped, single-storey building faced in buff brick with a pantile roof; the main range contains the meeting room, ancillary spaces and a small courtyard garden. The building was formally opened on 5 May 1962.
Minor internal alterations to improve access were undertaken in 1994–95, and refurbishment in 2014–15. Since 2017 its hall has accommodated a part of the 365 night shelter for rough sleepers, while during the COVID-19 pandemic it functioned as a field kitchen supplying daily meals to homeless people housed in emergency hotel accommodation.