Welcome to the Isla Gladstone Glass House Conservatory

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The Isla Gladstone Conservatory

The Isla Gladstone Conservatory is a breathtaking new venue placed at the heart of the recently restored Stanley Park. Converted with much care, the Victorian conservatory is set amidst picture-perfect rose gardens and lakes, surrounded by historic stone pavilions and adjacent to a fairy tale band stand.

The sun-flooded space breathes warmth and drama into any occasion, and is the perfect venue for weddings, civil ceremonies, lunches, outdoor BBQ’s, gala dinner’s, conferences, photo shoots, product launches and exhibitions. The magnificent surroundings transport you from an inner-city location and wistfully propel you into a postcard-like setting.

The venue can comfortably accommodate up to 250 guests for a formal sit-down dinner or up to 400 for a more relaxed canapé reception or evening event. The conservatory has its own bar with soft seating area, full disabled access and secure parking for over 100 cars.

We also have sitings for two large marquees, fully equipped with all facilities, set within the landscaped grounds beside the bandstand.

Whatever the occasion, the beautiful and unique Isla Gladstone Conservatory is undeniably the perfect venue. As well as the striking space and surroundings, our bespoke service is second to none. Our dedicated events team pride themselves on attention to detail and customer care is our number one priority. Nothing is beyond our grasp when planning your special occasion.

History of The Isla Gladstone Conservatory

In the Beginning:

The Isla Gladstone Conservatory was first erected in 1870 and was part of park designer Edward Kemp’s vision to create a useable park space in North Liverpool, providing fresh-air and a place for exercise for the inner-city populace. It was originally intended to house tropical and exotic plants grown in surrounding greenhouses.

Stanley Park was on the edge of the countryside when it was built, but was quickly consumed by the growing city. The beautiful glass structure designed by Mackenzie and Moncur had sadly, along with the park, fallen into utter disrepute less than a century after it was first built.

Attempts were made in the 1950’s and again during the 1980’s to convert the space, but to no real significance or success. So, after thirty long years of disuse, the Conservatory was but a pile of rusty iron and broken glass, overrun with weeds and hidden behind anti-vandal boards.

But there were a few who could see over the mounds of litter and through the barricade of graffiti, and so, in 2007, Stanley Park and The Isla Gladstone Conservatory became a major factor in the dream for urban regeneration in Liverpool.

Restoration:

The structure, made from 5,115 pieces, was painstakingly disassembled. The iron framework was unscrewed, taken away, restored, re-glazed and laid onto brand new foundations. The original stone and ironwork was kept where possible and specialist craftsmen were employed to help with the sympathetic restoration of this Grade II listed building.

The building, which cost only £12,000 to build and a massive £12 million to restore, now sits 1.5 metres higher than before. With breathtaking views over the city, The Isla Gladstone Conservatory is a striking space, and with a specially adapted, climate-controlled interior, is set to become one of the North West’s most unique and exclusive events venues.

Iconically situated between rival football clubs Liverpool and Everton, and listed with English Heritage, the building oozes history and is reminiscent of the long-forgotten childhood memories of local and outlying residents. With a nod to the old in such sensitive restoration, the Conservatory looks to the new with all the conveniences of modern technology.

Historic features of the park have also been returned, including five sandstone pavilions, rose walks and bridges and photographs have been used in the reformation of the Conservatory to maintain and reflect the original vision of its designers.

Isla Gladstone and the Gladstone Family:

The building is named after local Artist and Textiles Designer Isla Gladstone. Isla married into the elite Gladstone family, who were renowned representatives of the liberal-conservative movement in Victorian Liverpool.

The most famous Gladstone, perhaps, is William Gladstone of Rodney Street, British Liberal Party Statesman, Chancellor of the Exchequer and four times Prime Minister of the United Kingdom.

Isla Gladstone is famed for floral prints produced throughout the arts and crafts movement during the turn of the last century. Her work is incorporated into the very design of the interior, both in the main conservatory space and the bistro below. The inclusion of her delicate designs commemorates her inimitable talent and allows the Gladstone legacy to live on.  

The renovation of The Isla Gladstone Conservatory is a fitting marriage of creative and aristocratic elements of the city that spawned some of the most influential figures in both the arts and political industries.

The Isla Gladstone Conservation

As a grade II listed building set in Stanley Park, so described as one of the four major ‘lungs’ of the city of Liverpool, it is important that The Isla Gladstone Conservatory and its grounds are carefully maintained to prevent it returning to its once dilapidated state.

A massive total of £25 million was spent on the complete regeneration of the park, the conservatory and incorporated structures like the bandstand and pavilions. The original parts and materials were kept where possible, or replaced like for like if the damage was beyond repair.

Contractors heading the project were sympathetic to the original design of the park and the glasshouse and strove to uphold the vision of its original creators. The team came up with new concepts and ideas to maintain modern standards without changing existing structures or appearances.

For the supporting columns of the conservatory, cast iron pieces were replaced with a stronger, more modern equivalent called spheroidal graphite cast iron. In the specialist workshop in Telford, where parts were sent for expert repair work, pieces were blast cleaned using a process that removes corrosion without damaging the parent material.

Measures have been taken to make the conservatory leak proof, reduce the glare from the sun, strengthen the glass panes and install an effective drainage system, making the space fully useable and preserving the work that has been done to reinstate its former glory.

Stanley Park itself is officially a Green Flag Park. Details are now included on the award website: http://www.keepbritaintidy.org/GreenFlag/GreenFlagAwardSites/NorthWest/Default.aspx?parkID=1272

The Park is one of 17 Liverpool sites achieving this national standard. The full list of NW sites is available at:
http://www.keepbritaintidy.org/GreenFlag/GreenFlagAwardSites/northwest/winners/Default.asp

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