[1][2] G. Noel Hill was born in Wallasey, northern England, and educated at the King William's College, Isle of Man.
[1] Hill then became the second City Architect at Manchester, succeeding Henry Price (1867–1944) when he retired in August 1932.
[7] In this role, he designed the Broadway Baths (1932) in New Moston[8] and a new Manchester City Police Headquarters in Bootle Street (1933–37),[4][3] with a Portland stone facade.
[12] In Manchester, Hill was succeeded as City Architect by Leonard Cecil Howitt.
Hill was elected a Fellow of the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA).