Airdrie Town House

Airdie Town House is a municipal building in Bank Street, Airdrie, North Lanarkshire, Scotland.

[5] The new town house was designed by Alexander Baird in the neoclassical style, built in ashlar stone and completed in December 1826.

[5] The design involved a symmetrical main frontage with three bays facing onto Bank Street; the centre bay, which was slightly projected forward, featured a doorway on the ground floor flanked by two pairs of Tuscan order columns supporting an entablature and a small canopy; there was a sash window on the first floor.

[7] A bell was cast by Stephen Miller & Co of Glasgow and installed in the belfry in 1828,[1] and the building went on to serve as a hospital during the cholera outbreak in 1832.

[10] The building was considerably extended to the rear in 1948,[5] allowing the interior to be remodelled with a larger courtroom, which was also used as a council chamber, on the first floor.