[[wiki-architecture]] · [[Buildings and Structures]] · [[ARCHITECTURE]] · [[000]]
# Market house
A market house or market hall is a covered space historically used as a marketplace to exchange goods and services such as provisions or livestock, sometimes combined with spaces for public or civic functions on the upper floors and often with a jail or lockup in the cellar or basement floor. Market houses usually included an arcade to protect traders and their goods from the elements while maintaining private access to most of the building.
After this style of market building developed in British market towns, it spread to colonial territories of Great Britain, including Ireland and New England in America. A market house is typically located on a market square, quay or wharf in a central accessible area for the ease of transit of goods and people.
More contemporary market halls are often similar to food halls.
== Gallery ==
== See also ==
General store
Market (place)
Market hall and Market hall (disambiguation)
Market town
Market square
Moot hall
Market halls in Berlin
Market houses in Northern Ireland
Market houses in the Republic of Ireland
Stock exchange
Tholsel (Ireland) and Tolbooth (Scotland)
== References ==