Express & Star

Historic Birmingham hotel where Mahatma Gandhi once dined is to be transformed

A historic Birmingham hotel with links to Mahatma Gandhi will get a new lease of life with a much-needed refurbishment.

Published
The Murdoch and Pitman Building in Corporation Street, Birmingham. PIC: WMCA
The Murdoch and Pitman Building in Corporation Street, Birmingham. PIC: WMCA

The Victorian-built Murdoch Chambers & Pitman Building in Corporation Street has sat empty for a number of years apart from having a fast food outlet and mobile phone shop on its ground floors.

But the Grade II listed building has been awarded £1.8 million funding from West Midlands Mayor Richard Parker.

From left: Darren Perry from contractors BSN, Bill Houle of Trigram Properties Ltd, Richard Parker, Mayor of the West Midlands and project manager Emma Bridgewood from Wakeman\'s. PIC: WMCA
From left: Darren Perry from contractors BSN, Bill Houle of Trigram Properties Ltd, Richard Parker, Mayor of the West Midlands and project manager Emma Bridgewood from Wakeman's. Photo: WMCA

Developer MP DEVCO, which is a joint venture between RPGL and Trigram Properties, is preparing to start work converting and extending the building into a 4* hotel offering 156 luxury rooms and creating around 70 jobs.

It started life as a 19th century hotel featuring Britain’s first ever vegetarian restaurant, where lawyer and Indian independence campaigner Mahatma Gandhi is believed to have once dined.

The building was originally built in 1896 by J Crouch and E Butler for Dean’s Furniture and the Pitman Vegetarian restaurant, named after Sir Isaac Pitman, then vice-president of the Vegetarian Society and creator of Pitman’s shorthand.

Within a couple of years, the restaurant had expanded to become the Pitman Vegetarian Hotel and was still open when Gandhi visited the city in the 1930s. Later uses of the buildings included offices and barristers’ chambers.

The building features intricate carvings depicting its early uses, showing diners in the vegetarian restaurant and workers at Dean’s Furniture offices.

The Murdoch and Pitman Building in Corporation Street, Birmingham. PIC: WMCA
The Murdoch and Pitman Building in Corporation Street, Birmingham. Photo: WMCA

Mr Parker said: “Buildings like this are a real treasure for our community, they connect us to our history and bring some charm to our streets.

“That’s why I’m passionate about protecting and bringing them back to life by finding creative new ways to use them.

“It’s a great way to make the most of what they offer and give the local economy a boost.

“What’s great about the Murdoch and Pitman Building is that instead of being turned into something completely new, it’s actually going back to its original purpose as a hotel, a real case of history coming full circle.”

Bill Houle of Trigram Properties Ltd and Mark Holbeche of RPGL said: “We have spent four years bringing together the best professionals in Birmingham to save this historic listed building and start development of a 4* hotel.

“The completed scheme will provide additional facilities for Birmingham’s growing business and leisure tourism sectors.

Some of the ornate carvings on the façade of the Murdoch and Pitman Building. PIC: WMCA
Some of the ornate carvings on the façade of the Murdoch and Pitman Building. Photo: WMCA

“The support of the mayor and the WMCA [West Midlands Combined Authority] is really important in bringing forward developments such as this one in 2025.”

The WMCA said the development will help restore and revitalise the heritage building and its façade and enhance the historic and cultural distinctiveness of this part of Corporation Street which features the Grade I Listed Victoria Law Courts and the Grade II Listed Methodist Central Hall, which has stood empty for nearly 20 years.