17 & 19 Newhall Street is a red brick and terracotta Grade I listed building on the corner of
Newhall Street and
Edmund Street in the city centre of
Birmingham, England.
Originally having the postal address of 19 Newhall Street it was built as the new Central Telephone Exchange and offices for the National Telephone Company (NTC) and is popularly known as the Bell Edison Telephone Building - the NTC logo behind the wrought iron gates to the main entrance includes those names. It was also known as Telephone Buildings within the organisation. The Central exchange had 5000 subscribers and was the largest of its type in the country. The ground floor was let out to shops. The NTC was taken over by the Postmaster General in 1912 and the ownership transferred to the GPO. During World War I it was the Midland headquarters of the air raid warning system.
The Central Telephone Exchange relocated down Newhall Street to new premises (Telephone House) in 1936.
It is now occupied by Associated Architects, and Phoenix Beard (a firm of property consultants). It currently uses the address The Exchange, 19 Newhall Street, Birmingham, B3 3PJ, but the property occupies 17 & 19 Newhall Street and 103 Edmund Street. The basement, and entrance on Edmund Street, is occupied by a bar called Bushwackers.
The building was designed in 1896 by Frederick Martin of the firm Martin & Chamberlain.
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