Holyoake House is a building in the NOMA district of Manchester, England, which was completed in 1911.
Harris, it was built for the Co-operative Union in memory of George Holyoake.
It was erected in 1911[2] on Hanover Street[3] and named Holyoake House.
The building was extended in the 1930s,[4] and a training centre on the top floor was destroyed by an incendiary bomb in the Manchester Blitz of 1940.
[7] A collection of Holyoake's letters, papers and other writings are held in store in the National Co-operative Archive, also housed in the building,[8] whilst the building itself received Grade II listed building status on 20 June 1988.