Piccadilly Gardens

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Fountains in Piccadilly Gardens looking towards Market Street
Fountains in Piccadilly Gardens looking towards Market Street

Piccadilly Gardens is a green space in Manchester city centre, England, situated at one end of Market Street (a busy shopping area) and on the edge of the Northern Quarter.

[edit] History

Manchester's Piccadilly Gardens was the original site of the Manchester Royal Infirmary. The infirmary occupied the site at Piccadilly from 1752 to 1910 (when it moved to its current site on Oxford Road); the lowered area (as before 2000) of the gardens arose from the hospital's basement. In 1914 the infirmary had been fully removed from the site, and after several years of trying to decide how to the develop the site, it ended up being left and made into Manchester's largest open inner city green space.

The square at Piccadilly Gardens is currently the central hub of Manchester's public transport system. The square is only 5 minutes walk from the mainline Manchester Piccadilly railway station and 10 minutes walk from Manchester Victoria railway station.

Queen Victoria statue with Piccadilly Plaza in the background
Queen Victoria statue with Piccadilly Plaza in the background

The square was revamped in 20012002, after a design by renowned Japanese architect Tadao Ando, to include new green space and fountains, although the original statues all remain. The redesign was part of the massive construction process that covered Manchester in the build up to the city hosting the 2002 Commonwealth Games. Previously the square was becoming increasingly run down and was considered unsafe. At a contract cost of around £10 million Piccadilly Gardens was renovated and ended up being shortlisted in 2003 for the Better Public Building Award.

Piccadilly Gardens are currently a major public transport interchange where First and Stagecoach buses can be caught. There is also a Metrolink tram stop with trams on both of Manchester's lines stopping there. Information on Manchester's transport system can be gained from GMPTE's website.

[edit] Buildings

The square is surrounded by buildings that cover the ages of modern Manchester. From old Victorian warehouses and shops dating from the Industrial Revolution and Manchester's role as the cotton marketing capital to the new visually un-stimulating office block development which is part of Piccadilly Garden's regeneration. The building that visitors are likely to notice first is the huge complex of Piccadilly Plaza which stands over Piccadilly. It is a building that will invoke mixed emotions in most people.

The towering Piccadilly Plaza
The towering Piccadilly Plaza

Piccadilly Plaza was originally built by Covell Matthews and Partners from 1959 to 1965 and has been recently re-modeled by Leslie Jones Architects in 2001 (this mainly involved replacing the old Chinese styled towers at the northern end). The building although not fitting in (or showing any sympathy) with its surroundings impresses with its 1960s sci-fi look. Piccadilly Plaza contains the Jarvis Piccadilly Hotel. The huge tower block, now renamed City Tower. As of 2005 the Plaza is undergoing large-scale remodelling with recladding of the tower and cleaning of concrete facades.

Cotton warehouses which are now The Thistle Hotel
Cotton warehouses which are now The Thistle Hotel

The impressive Thistle Hotel stands on the south-eastern side of Piccadilly Gardens, which is now unfortunately partly obscured by the new office block. The hotel was originally 3 cotton warehouses (with a fourth standing to the left) which made up the four warehouses designed by Edward Walters between 1851 and 1858. Also, there is the Grade II listed Britannia Hotel on Portland Street which was formally the architecturally renowned Watts Warehouse.

Other buildings of interest around Piccadilly Gardens are:

[edit] Statues

Queen Victoria Statue
Queen Victoria Statue

In addition to the many fine buildings that stand around Piccadilly Gardens there are also numerous statues:

(source of graded buildings from www.manchester2002-uk.com)

[edit] Sources

Coordinates: 53°28′50″N, 2°14′13″W