It sits at the top of Bold Street, Liverpool's most singular shopping street, on the edge of Chinatown and in view of the massive redbrick Anglican Cathedral. Everyone in the city knows it and gives and takes directions from it. It's got no roof but it hasn't stopped the people making good use of it, and its gardens, since it was hit by a Luftwaffe incendiary bomb on 5 May 1941.
Some time back I was part of an interfaith working group compiling a bid to the City Council to transform St Lukes' into Liverpool Peace Centre, creating a new building inside the bombed-out shell for exhibition and education spaces on the theme of the people's experiences of war and peace, past and present.
That never came to anything, but since then it's been great to see how the city's creative community have made great use of the space for exhibitions, open-air films, all kinds of performances. And never forgetting the events which made the building what it is now - the blitz and its effect on Liverpool's people. I hope the campaign to keep it as 'living, working monument' succeed.
Recent Comments