Beaconsfield Town Hall

[2] The Coronation Town Hall was a public hall for functions and entertainment rather than offices or meeting place for the council; the urban district council continued to meet at the town's Reading Rooms at 8 The Broadway, Wycombe End, until the end of 1914.

[4] The new building was designed by Burgess, Holden & Watson together with the council surveyor, John Crosby, in the Neo-Georgian style, built in brown brick with stone dressings at a cost of £7,600 and was officially opened by the Chairman of Buckinghamshire County Council, Sir Leonard West, on 23 May 1936.

[2] The design involved a symmetrical main frontage with eleven bays facing onto Station Road; the central section of five bays, which slightly projected forward, featured a doorway on the ground floor and five French doors with a wrought-iron balcony on the first floor.

[6] The 1911 Coronation Town Hall was demolished and a residential and retail building called Cardain House built on the site in the mid-1960s.

[13] Ornaments included small iron figures, designed by the artist, Steffi Goddard, depicting Blyton's characters, Noddy and Big Ears,[14][15] and an armillary sphere sundial in blackened brass.

Plaque in the building's porch marking its opening in 1936.