Manchester Arndale
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Manchester Arndale | |
Facts and statistics | |
---|---|
Location | Manchester, England |
Opening date | 1975 |
Developer | Arndale Property Trust |
Owner | Prudential Capital Shopping Centres |
No. of stores and services | 155 currently (~210 Total) |
No. of anchor tenants | 7 |
Total retail floor area | 1,400,000 sq ft (130,060 m²) |
Parking | 777 spaces, NCP |
No. of floors | 3 (21 in Office Tower) |
Website | http://www.manchesterarndale.com/ |
Manchester Arndale (known locally as The Arndale Centre or just The Arndale) is a large shopping centre in Manchester City Centre, England. The centre was built during the 1970s, and was subsequently redeveloped after the Provisional Irish Republican Army bomb in 1996. Manchester Arndale is the largest in-town retail centre in the United Kingdom.[1]
Contents |
[edit] History
Manchester Arndale is the largest of a chain of Arndale Centres built across the UK in the 1960s and 1970s. It was constructed in phases between 1972 and 1979, at a cost of £100 m. [2]
Over the past decade, the centre has seen large-scale redevelopment. The centre now has a retail floorspace of 1,400,000 sq ft (130,060 m²), making it the UK's largest city-centre shopping mall.[1] It has held this record continuously since construction apart from a brief spell during the northern redevelopment when the title was held by the Birmingham Bullring. As well as retail space, Manchester Arndale also includes a 96 m tower containing office space.
When originally built, many locals regarded it as an eyesore as it was clad in unattractive yellow tiles, earning it the nickname "The world's biggest public lavatory". Since renovation began, the tiles have been removed and a more modern tile, along with mirrors, has been introduced.[citation needed]
By the late 1990s the centre was no longer owned by the Arndale Property Trust. A rebranding was proposed, but subsequently abandoned. Today the centre is jointly owned by Prudential and Capital Shopping Centres.
[edit] Redevelopment
The centre was badly damaged in the 1996 Manchester City Centre bombing by the Provisional IRA and needed extensive redevelopment work. In the immediate aftermath of the bombing the southern half of the centre was repaired and refurbished. The northern half was patched up with buses originally stopping on Cannon Street itself, before being replaced by Shudehill Interchange in January 2006. Marks and Spencer, which was particularly badly damaged in the explosion, reopened in a separate building, linked to the main mall on the first floor by a glass footbridge which was designed by Stephen Hodder. Shortly after opening the large branch, the building was split into two independent shops. Half remained a branch of Marks and Spencer while the side facing The Triangle became a branch of Selfridges.
In October 2003, as the final stage of rebuilding the city centre after the bombing, the whole of the half of the centre north of Cannon Street was closed and demolished. Over the next two to three years, the northern half of the centre was completely rebuilt and extended.
The first phase of the "northern extension", known as 'Exchange Court', opened on 24 October 2005. Exchange Court features Britain's flagship and the world's largest Next store and River Island.
This was followed by the second phase known as 'New Cannon Street'. This opened on 6 April 2006. Stores in this phase include a new flagship branch of TopShop (Topman).
On 7 September 2006 the third and final phase of the northern extension opened. The new Winter Garden features stores such as a new Virgin Megastore to replace the one that used to be on Market Street, a Waterstone's bookshop, and a new single-level unit for the Arndale Market. The completed mall provides a link from Exchange Square and The Triangle to the Northern Quarter, and from Market Street to The Printworks.
Only the southern half of the centre has been extensively refurbished, and the pictures show some major design differences between the two halves of the centre. Halle Square has been modernised, including new skylights, but there is still a major difference in levels of natural light between the original malls and the northern extension. The original 1970s malls were designed to "protect" visitors from the outside, whereas the newer malls seek to maximise natural light.
[edit] Food Court
Like many large shopping malls, Manchester Arndale has a food court. The Food-Chain (formerly known as Voyagers) is an 800-seat food court situated on the second floor above the far south-west tip of the centre. It can be reached by an escalator from Market Street and from the first floor at the south-western tip of the centre close to Argos and the first floor entrance to Boots.
[edit] Image gallery
[edit] References
- ^ Manchester Arndale - UK's largest in-town shopping centre. Prudential plc (2007). Retrieved on September 6, 2007.
- ^ Frame, Don. "Revealed: The new Arndale", Manchester Evening News, M.E.N media, 20 October 2005. Retrieved on 2007-08-17.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Manchester Arndale Centre home page
- Manchester Arndale Market home page for Manchester Arndale's Market
- Capital Shopping Centres (CSC) - Manchester Arndale
- Manchester Arndale Letting Plans (including Northern Extension)
|