Destroyed 2 July 1905 for a tram shed and road widening.
The southern end of Upper Street is a former tram shed, which was originally built in 1850 as a tram station, used for commuter service to the City.
Queens Hall was the central tram shed, situated off Swinegate.
South Lancashire Tramways built a tram shed, power station and offices in 1901 on the north side of Leigh Road.
The main tram shed was on Park Road, Stalybridge adjacent to the Tame Valley generating station.
Smaller tram sheds were also built in Hyde and Mossley.
This was transferred to the town's abandoned tram sheds, before a completely new factory was built in Kirbymoorside in 1934 and he abandoned furniture-making.
In 1938, the tram sheds were enlarged for the arrival of the "Parisiennes", ten reversible trams bought from Paris.
Tramway, Brook mused, had come to mean not just the bricks and mortar of a disused tram shed, but a place for human beings to create.
Out in the tram shed, only two large interurban coaches hovered in the maze of shallow stone alleyways the vehicles used for a roadbed.