High Pavement Chapel is a redundant church building in Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, England.
By August 1662, under the Act of Uniformity, two Nottingham ministers, John Whitlock and William Reynolds, had been deprived of their living at St Mary's Church, Nottingham and a third, John Barret, of his at St Peter's; the three men left town to comply with the Five Mile Act 1665.
However, they continued to preach in the area, including houses in Nottingham's Bridlesmith Gate and Middle Pavement.
The current building was opened in 1876, built to a design of the architect Stuart Colman, of Bristol.
It was then converted into the Nottingham Lace Museum, but this venture proved financially unviable[citation needed].