The Great Hall is a grade II listed[1] Gothic Revival building located at the University of Leeds in West Yorkshire, England.
The building is primarily used for formal occasions such as graduation ceremonies and university students' examinations.
The buildings were designed by the late architect Alfred Waterhouse R.A (famed for his works on the Natural History Museum in London) in red pressed brick and had dressings of Bolton Wood stone in a Gothic Collegiate style.
The Gothic style Great Hall incorporated the university's main library and cost around £22,000 to build which was raised partly by public appeal.
The Great Hall is still used to this day for meetings, examinations and graduation ceremonies and is one of a small cluster of buildings on the University of Leeds campus exhibiting redbrick architecture traits associated with a select number of civic universities in the United Kingdom.