Southwark Crown Court | |
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![]() Southwark Crown Court | |
Location | English Grounds, London |
Coordinates | 51°30′20″N0°04′56″W / 51.5056°N 0.0823°W /51.5056; -0.0823 |
Built | 1983 |
Architect | Property Services Agency |
Architectural style(s) | Modern style |
The Crown Court at Southwark, usually referred to asSouthwark Crown Court, is aCrown Court venue at 1 English Grounds (off Battlebridge Lane) on thesouth bank of the River Thames betweenLondon Bridge andTower Bridge in London. It operates within the South Eastern Region ofHis Majesty's Courts and Tribunals Service.[1]
Until the 1980s, the principal criminal court for south London was theSessions House inNewington Causeway.[2] However, as the number of criminal cases in south London grew, it became necessary to commission additional courthouse capacity for south London. The site selected, on the south bank of the River Thames, had been occupied by a large warehouse known as "Willson's Wharf",[3] which was badly damaged in a fire in August 1971.[4] The warehouse was demolished and the empty site was acquired by theLord Chancellor's Department at a cost of £2 million.[5]
The new building was designed by theProperty Services Agency[6] in themodern style, built in yellow brick at a cost of £12.6 million,[7] and was opened in 1983.[8] The design involved a broadly symmetrical three-storey main frontage facing south onto English Grounds. It featured a long flatportico which was projected forward and supported by brick columns; it was fenestrated by small squarecasement windows on the ground floor and by rectangular casement windows on the first and second floors, and there was an additional, taller block behind the main frontage. ARoyal coat of arms was mounted on the left hand side of the main frontage at first floor level. Internally, the building was laid out to accommodate 15 courtrooms, making it the fourth largest court centre in the country and the main serious fraud centre for the area.[9]
Notable cases have included the trial and conviction of the publicist,Max Clifford, in April 2014, for indecent assault,[10] the trial and conviction of the entertainer,Rolf Harris, in June 2014, for indecent assault,[11] the trial and conviction of the disc jockey,Dave Lee Travis, in September 2014, for indecent assault,[12] the trial and conviction of the tennis player,Boris Becker, in April 2022, for breaches of theInsolvency Act,[13] and the trial and conviction of former chief executive of the Formula One Group,Bernie Ecclestone, for fraud in October 2023.[14][15]