User:Blueboar/drafts - Masonic buildings - conversion to chart

Denmark

 * Freemasons' Hall, Copenhagen 55.69763°N, 12.57301°W

Hong Kong

 * Zetland Hall is the headquarters of the District Grand Lodge of Hong Kong and the Far East. Hong Kong Freemasons built the first Zetland Hall in 1865 and used it until it was destroyed in an air raid in 1944. In 1949 it was replaced by the second Zetland Hall.

India

 * Goshamal Baradari, in Hyderabad, India, built in 1682, and donated to the fraternity in 1872 by the Nizam of Hyderabad,

Malaysia

 * Penang Masonic Temple, in Penang

Spain

 * Masonic Temple of Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Canary Islands

Sri Lanka

 * Victoria Masonic Temple, Colombo

England

 * London


 * Freemasons' Hall, London is the home of the United Grand Lodge of England
 * Headquarters, Order of Women Freemasons, a 19th-century building at 27 Pembridge Gardens, Notting Hill, which is a Grade II listed building, that since 1924 has been home of Order of Women Freemasons
 * Cheltenham Masonic Hall Grade II* listed.
 * The Cloisters, Letchworth is a Grade II* listed building.
 * The Hanging Chapel in Langport is a Grade I listed building and a Scheduled Ancient Monument that became a masonic hall in 1891.
 * Old Orchard Street Theatre, Bath Theatre and church which became a masonic hall in 1865.
 * Phoenix Lodge, Sunderland. A Grade I listed building with the longest continuous usage of a Masonic meeting place in the world.
 * Royal Masonic School for Boys in Bushey, Hertfordshire.
 * Royal Masonic School in Rickmansworth, Hertfordshire. (Chapel is Grade II listed).

Scotland

 * The building used by Lodge Mother Kilwinning Kilwinning, Ayrshire, consecrated in 1893, includes a museum of Masonic artefacts. The lodge traces its history to the building of Kilwinning Abbey, circa 1140. The current lodge building replaced a lodge building that was erected in 1779.
 * Pollokshields Burgh Hall in Glasgow, meeting place for Lodge Pollok, Pollokshields No. 772.