Central Milton Keynes

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Coordinates: 52°02′32″N 0°45′35″W / 52.0423°N 0.7598°W / 52.0423; -0.7598
Central Milton Keynes

View from Great Holm, approximately one mile to the west
Central Milton Keynes

 Central Milton Keynes shown within Buckinghamshire
Area  0.9 sq mi (2.3 km2)
Population 2,726 [1]
    - Density  3,029 /sq mi (1,170 /km2)
OS grid reference SP851389
Civil parish Central Milton Keynes
Unitary authority Milton Keynes
Ceremonial county Buckinghamshire
Region South East
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town MILTON KEYNES
Postcode district MK9
Dialling code 01908
Police Thames Valley
Fire Buckinghamshire
Ambulance South Central
EU Parliament South East England
UK Parliament Milton Keynes North
Website centralmk-tc.gov.uk
List of places
UK
England
Buckinghamshire

Central Milton Keynes is the central business district of Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire, England and a civil parish in its own right.

The district is approximately 2.5 km long by 1 km wide and occupies some of the highest land in Milton Keynes. It contains (behind the Central Library) the site of Secklow Hundred moot hill, the meeting site of the Anglo-Saxon settlers in the area. It contains the central retail, business, law enforcement and governmental districts, Milton Keynes Central railway station and around 2000 residential dwellings.

(Campbell Park, stretching from Marlborough Street down to the Grand Union Canal, is sometimes included in mental maps of the centre, though in fact it is part of a separate civil parish). It is included in the area known as Central Milton Keynes for the purposes of planning and development.

Topology

Occupying 238 hectares (590 acres),[2] the area lies between Portway (H5, A509) to the north, the West Coast Main Line and A5 to the west, Childs Way (H6) to the south and Marlborough Street (V8, B4034) to the east. It is crossed from north to south by (in west to east order, major roads only) Grafton Gate (V6), Witan Gate, Saxon Gate (V7) and Secklow Gate. It is crossed from west to east (in north to south order, major roads only) by Silbury Boulevard, Midsummer Boulevard and Avebury Boulevard. Midsummer Boulevard is the primary spine.

East of Saxon Gate: the main retail/service/entertainment district

This area is almost the highest[3] point of Milton Keynes and includes the site of the moot mound (meeting place) for the Anglo-Saxon Secklow Hundred just behind the library.

The area is defined by Marlborough Street (V8, B4034) to the north-east, the Saxon Gate (Saxon Street, V7) to the south-west, Portway (H5, A509) to the north-west and Childs Way (H6) to the south-east. The core retail district is further delimited by Silbury and Avebury Boulevards, with civic and office developments outside the Boulevards.

The retail district includes thecentre:mk and Midsummer Place (the covered high streets that are the Central Milton Keynes Shopping Centres). The Library, Milton Keynes Borough Council civic offices and other commercial offices are on the north side of the shops; the theatre, art gallery, Theatre District, Xscape (see below), pubs, sports shops and other leisure facilities are on the south side.

Xscape

Xscape is the main leisure complex in Central Milton Keynes consisting of SnoZone, a real snow indoor ski slope, climbing wall and a multiscreen cinema, and a number of shops, restaurants and night clubs. At the rear of the site is Airkix, the first publicly available indoor skydiving tunnel in the UK.

Milton Keynes Theatre and Gallery

The 1,400 seat Milton Keynes theatre/concert hall has an unusual feature: the ceiling can be lowered closing off the third tier (gallery) to create a more intimate space for smaller scale productions. It is the most successful regional theatre in the UK outside of London and operated by the Ambassador Theatre Group.

Milton Keynes Gallery (the municipal art gallery, beside the main theatre) does not have a permanent collection. This allows it to host edgy shows to critical acclaim.[4]

West of Saxon Gate, east of Grafton Gate: the main business district

Ecumenical Church of Christ the Cornerstone

This area is also delimited by Portway and Childs Way. Saxon Gate separates it from the north-east area and Grafton Gate (Grafton Street, V7) marks its south-western edge. The domed Church of Christ the Cornerstone, law courts and police station are in the business district, which has a number of notable buildings including CBX (central business exchange), The Hub:MK and the remarkable purpose-built Indian restaurant(Jaipur) beside the small linear Grafton Park that provides its core. The restaurant claims to be the largest purpose-built Indian restaurant in Europe.

Ecumenical Church of Christ the Cornerstone

This ecumenical church, the first such in the United Kingdom, is shared by the major Christian denominations to serve the office workers and the small resident population. (There are many denominational places of worship throughout the town at large).

The Hub:MK

The Hub:MK, home to several businesses and a trade centre along with apartments, flats and two hotels.

The Hub:MK is a 2006-built development between the station and the church, consisting of towers ranging between 10 and 14 stories. The complex includes two high-rise hotels and a number of residential and office towers set around a central piazza. The site controversially involves the closure of one of the original pedestrian underpasses and is built right up to the edge of the adjacent boulevard, the first of several proposals that would have changed the unique character of Milton Keynes Development Corporation's original design for Central Milton Keynes. The work is part of the 'densification' plan that central government, through its agency English Partnerships, had ordained for Milton Keynes. Its height, also a major departure from the original low-rise design, makes it the third tallest building in Milton Keynes, beaten only by the 14-storey Xscape and the 18-storey Mellish Court in Bletchley.

To the south of the Hub lies a similar development named Vizion. This is similar in height and layout to the Hub but features a large Sainsburys supermarket taking up the lower two floors with a rooftop garden above it. Vizion was completed in 2009, whilst the following year saw the completion of the 9-story Pinnacle office development further west along Midsummer Boulevard from the Hub, closer to the railway station. The latter is distinctive for the slanted roof on its tallest section.

West of Grafton Gate: the station district

This district is defined by Saxon Gate (Saxon Street, V7) to the north-east, the West Coast Main Line (and the adjacent A5) to the south-west, Portway (H5, A509) to the north-west and Childs Way (H6) to the south-east. The core retail district is further delimited by Silbury and Avebury Boulevards, with civic and office developments outside the Boulevards.

Milton Keynes Central and Station Square

The main feature of the district is the Milton Keynes Central railway station (an inter-city stop on the West Coast Main Line), one of the five[5] stations serving Milton Keynes. Coach services operate from here as well as from the Milton Keynes coachway next to junction 14 of the M1 motorway. Services include the Stagecoach X5 service that replaces the Varsity Line, which links Milton Keynes with Oxford in the west (for connections to the west and Wales) and Cambridge in the east; and the VT99 service to Luton Airport, operated by Stagecoach on behalf of Virgin Rail. The station building houses commercial office lets and food outlets, and the Station Square development includes further office lets and retail outlets.

The former central bus station is located opposite the station but has not been operating as such since 1997. The interchange point is located at the railway station forecourt. The upstairs level of the bus station (formerly a night club) accommodates a young peoples facility. There is an award winning covered "urban" skate-boarding area, the Buszy, beside the bus station which attracts international 'skaters' and film crews.

The National Hockey Stadium was formerly located on a site to the north of the station, surrounded by a number of important retail units. Beginning December 2009, the site is being developed as the national 'centre' for Network Rail, due for completion by Autumn 2012.[6] To its south there is another leisure and retail area – the Leisure Plaza, notably the Planet Ice Arena (home of Milton Keynes Lightning) and what was another ten-pin bowling alley. As of 2011, this area is planned for re-development.

Civil parish

Central Milton Keynes is a civil parish, bordering (clockwise from north) Great Linford, Campbell Park, Loughton, and Bradwell.[7] The parish was created in 2001, and had a population of 1,272 according to the 2001 census.[8]

ONS Urban sub-area

The Office for National Statistics designated urban sub-area (map) called "Central Milton Keynes" is far bigger than either the district or the parish. It consists of that part of Milton Keynes that is west of the River Ouzel, but north of the Bletchley urban sub-area (which approximates to the former Bletchley Urban District), south-east of the Wolverton/Stony Stratford urban sub-area (which approximates to the former Wolverton Urban District) and south of the North Milton Keynes urban sub-area. (The provenance of "North Milton Keynes", and of its boundary with the Central Milton Keynes urban sub-area, are unclear. The Central Milton Keynes and North Milton Keynes urban sub-areas together approximate to that part of the former Newport Pagnell Rural District that is west of the River Ouzel).

Media

Locations around Central Milton Keynes were used for the movie Superman IV, where it played the part of the United Nations building. Recognisable locations include Milton Keynes Central, CBX and the Argos (now Home retail Group) building on Avebury Boulevard.[9]

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.