It was not a public toilet it was a police sub station. There was an almost identical one on New Brighton promenade near to the old Floral Pavilion. There was a more modern variety near the Oyster Catcher pub. Some youths removed the plastic letters 'P' and 'O' from that one leaving 'LICE'. A totally different design was on the promenade at the bottom of Tobin Street. It had long since fallen out of use by the early 1960s and the wall panels had been removed leaving the roof and supporting brick pillars and raised base causing some people to believe that it was a band stand.
Can't see it sorry. I don't have 'permission'. God know who does.
I'm not disputing its existence as police station, but a building that small with two doors strongly implies it was a toilet at some point in its existence.
Perhaps it was upgraded from toilet to copshop and new toilets built behind it?
interestingly, what happened to the houses behind it? They are not on a 1938 map and not on a 1970 map. Not a very long life for what looks like large houses.
I'm not disputing its existence as police station, but a building that small with two doors strongly implies it was a toilet at some point in its existence.
Perhaps it was upgraded from toilet to copshop and new toilets built behind it?
The toilets were built before the police station and have not moved. The police station was built in front of the toilets. Here is a 1925 map. https://maps.nls.uk/view/114581068
interestingly, what happened to the houses behind it? They are not on a 1938 map and not on a 1970 map. Not a very long life for what looks like large houses.
They were prefabs built at the end of the war and later demolished.
Can't see it sorry. I don't have 'permission'. God know who does.
I'm not disputing its existence as police station, but a building that small with two doors strongly implies it was a toilet at some point in its existence.
Perhaps it was upgraded from toilet to copshop and new toilets built behind it?
I worry that you think any building with two doors is a toilet! It was built as a police substation and nothing else. How do I know this without relying on Google (as is the custom these days it seems)? Because as a kid I was taken in there by a police constable along with another lad for riding two on a bike. Had he taken two boys in a public toilet that would raise public concerns I am sure.
The door on the left led inside to the police office which as you can imagine was very small. The other door? Well in those days police officers either walked or rode bicycles and the door on the left was access to a small area where the police officer could safely place his bicycle. The public toilets at the back were nothing at all to do with the police substation. Totally unrelated .
Not a very long life for what looks like large houses.[/quote]
They were just the usual prefab size but had very decent gardens. The oval shaped area with two trees on the map was actually quite dense with shrubs and trees and was a favourite place for gangs of youths to hang out and ambush lone boys cutting through from Central Park.