Gallery

St Helen's House, King Street. Grade I Listed. Built between 1766 and 1767 by the architect Joseph Pickford. Former residence of John Gisbourne and the Strutt family

The Corn Exchange, Albert Street. Grade II Listed. Built in 1862 for the Corn Exchange Company. Converted into the Palace Theatre of Varieties in 1897. Became a dance hall after the First World War and taken over by the Derby Evening Telegraph in 1929

The Brunswick Inn, Railway Terrace. Grade II Listed. Built in 1841 by the architect Francis Thompson for the Midland Railway as a public house for railwaymen and second-class passengers

Pickford's House, Friar Gate. Grade I Listed. Built in 1770 by the architect Joseph Pickford as his family home. After his death the house underwent various changes and owners before Derby City Council purchased it in 1982. Now a museum

The Guildhall, Market Place. Grade II listed. Following a fire to the previous Guildhall, this building was rebuilt to a design by Henry Duesbury in 1842

The Guildhall, Market Place. Grade II listed. Following a fire to the previous Guildhall, this building was rebuilt to a design by Henry Duesbury in 1842

27 Queen Street, Grade II Listed. Residence of John Flamsteed, John Whitehurst and Joseph Wright. Visited by Benjamin Franklin

St Mary's Bridge, Sowter Road, Grade II* Listed. The bridge was built between 1789 and 1794 as a replacement for the former medieval bridge. It was built by architect Thomas Harrison. William Strutt was a contributor to the project

Bridge Chapel House, Sowter Road, Grade I Listed. Built in the late 13th to early 14th century. It functioned as a collection point for tolls levied on traffic across the first medieval bridge

Highfield House, Highfield Gardens, Grade II Listed. Built in 1827 with later alterations by Richard Leaper for Rev. Edward Unwin, Rector of St. Werburgh's

The Derby Silk Mill, Silk Mill Lane, Grade II Listed. The original mill was established by John Lombe in 1721 to house Italian silk-throwing machines. It was destroyed by fire in 1910 and this building was built in its place. Now a Museum

Ye Olde Dolphin Inne, 5 Queen Street, Grade II Listed. Built in the late 16th century but the timber framed exterior was remodelled in the early 20th century