Paisley Arts Centre
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One of Scotland's premier touring theatre venues, Paisley Arts Centre occupies a converted church set in the heart of the historic town of Paisley.
This intimate and friendly venue provides an all year-round programme of drama, music, comedy and dance and frequently hosts Scottish and world premieres.
Enjoy a tasty lunch at the cafe, or a post-performance drink in The Haunt bar at Paisley Arts Centre and select from their extensive wine list, cocktail menu or wide range of premium beers.
**NEWS UPDATE - BUSINESS AS USUAL** Due to the Paisley Town Centre Townscape Heritage Initiative (THI) and Conservation Area Regeneration Scheme (CARS) Paisley Arts Centre is currently under construction. Nevertheless the venue is operating as normal and is committed to providing an exciting programme of arts performances and workshops.
For further information can be found at Paisley THI/CARS Project Website.
New Season
Our current Spring 2012 season of performances, events and exhibitions is well under way! Pick up a free copy of our latest What's On Guide, available at Paisley Town Hall, Paisley Arts Centre or Paisley Museum.
Alternatively, please contact the box office on 0141 887 1010 and they'll send you out a copy. If you would like to book tikets for our performances, please access our online booking system or contact the Box Office direct on 0141 887 1010.
Alternatively, please contact the box office on 0141 887 1010 and they'll send you out a copy. If you would like to book tikets for our performances, please access our online booking system or contact the Box Office direct on 0141 887 1010.
Find out more about:
Getting here
Paisley Arts Centre location mapThe venue is easily accessible via public transport, and is only a five minute walk from Paisley Gilmour Street Station, just ten minutes by regular rail service from Glasgow Central Station.
You can plan your journey simply by using the Traveline Scotland website.
Paisley Arts Centre welcomes all visitors.
As the building is listed there are restrictions on modifications which can be made to the building, both internally and externally. However, level access to Paisley Arts Centre provides easy access to our cafe, booking office and theatre. The ground floor also has an adapted toilet. There is a lift to the first floor which gives access to the workshop and bar. Regrettably, the lift may not be suitable for larger motorised wheelchairs.
There is a limited number of wheelchair spaces in the theatre and wheelchair users are asked to make their requirements known to box office staff at time of booking.
For customers with mobility problems, front row seats can be made available. Customers who find stairs difficult should request front row seats when making a booking.
Paisley Arts Centre is fitted with an induction loop system. On arrival at the theatre, customers with a hearing impairment should inform box office staff or the duty manager if they wish to take advantage of this system.
The season brochure, with information on performances, events, exhibitions and classes, is available in large print, audio described and Braille. We can also arrange to have the brochure translated to other community languages. If you would like to receive a copy of our season brochure in your preferred format, please contact us.
We hope that everyone enjoys their visit to Paisley Arts Centre. But we appreciate that we may not always get it right. We would welcome your suggestions regarding our accessibility or any other aspect of your visit.
Contact us:
- email: ram.els@renfrewshire.gov.uk
- phone: 0141 887 1010 (information and box office) (Closed for lunch between 12.30pm and 1.30pm) or 0141 887 1007 (venue hire and marketing)
- Paisley Arts Centre, New Street, Paisley PA1 1EZ
- Opening hours: Mon to Fri 9.15am - 4.45pm, Sat 9.45am - 4.45pm. Extended opening hours on performance nights.
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History of the Old Laigh Kirk
The Town Councillors began wishing for a Parish Church of their own soon after 1730. In 1733, they negotiated the purchase of two tracts of land, Aikett's Yard north of St Mirren’s Burn (now culverted) and Causeyland, or the Meikle Yard south of it, and also two or three houses in Causeyside. The southern part was the wider and this was for the Church. Meanwhile they negotiated with the Earl of Dundonald, patron of the existing Abbey Church, and the existing Presbytery, for leave to 'disjoin' a separate parish.
The New Street was laid off in 38 building lots which were auctioned profitably on 15th March 1734. (Some of these lots were afterwards subdivided.) Building of the Church began in 1736 (local masons Young and Hart contracted) from the proceeds.
In 1738 the church was open and the rev. Robert Mitchell came from the Abbey, where he had been the second minister (the Abbey, with a huge parish, had two ministers.) Among the 18 elders composing the new Kirk Session were several bailies and other important people. Their minutes show that they worked in close co-operation with the council to enforce the puritanical discipline of the time on the Burgh’s inhabitants.
The most famous person associated with this Church was Dr John Witherspoon, the next minister but one after Mitchell. He was a controversialist who tried to enforce the strictest moral standards both nationally and locally, making war on Sabbath-breakers and stage plays as well as on more serious crimes (for which the police force was quite inadequate). By that time some of the richer parishioners were much less willing to be disciplined; and when Witherspoon brought some of them before the Presbytery for blasphemous behaviour (particularly parodying the Communion Service while drunk) they employed a lawyer, got a verdict of Not Proven and then successfully sued the minister for libel because he had printed a sermon denouncing them. Not surprisingly, Witherspoon yielded to the repeated solicitations of his American admirers to go and become the Principal of Princeton. From then on (1768) he became a part of American history; he was one of the signatories of the Declaration of Independence.
The development of 1733 was the start of a period of rapid growth in the town. There soon had to be two more Burgh churches serving a High and a Middle Parish and this church was then the Laigh (Low) Church. The burn just north of the churchyard was the parish boundary; George Street and Causeyside were this church’s parish. By the end of the century the congregation was outgrowing the Church, which was in any case old-fashioned and damp. After the Napoleonic Wars it was replaced by St George’s Church, visible at the end of Shuttle Street though now converted into flats.
The Old Laigh Kirk remained Burgh property and was available for letting to smaller religious bodies, (Paisley was very tolerant of dissenters so long as they were Protestant), for Sunday Schools, etc, and as a public meeting hall. It was so much appreciated for this last purpose that when the Town Council proposed in 1833 to sell it there was an outcry. Eventually a group of local individuals bought it so as to retain it as a public meeting place. Shortly afterwards the Evangelical Union leased it; this was a body formed in Kilmarnock in 1835 which differed from all the Calvinist churches on some fundamental points of doctrine and had a small but keen membership in Paisley.
By the 20th century the the E. U. congregation had moved away, leaving the old church, once again, in the hands of the local authority. In 1987 it was re-opened as an Arts Centre, for which the shape in which the last Church rebuilding had left it was reasonably well adaptable.
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