Eastgate Shopping Centre, Gloucester

Eastgate Shopping Centre
Location Gloucester, England
Coordinates 51°51′52″N 2°14′50″W / 51.8643941°N 2.24733611°W / 51.8643941; -2.24733611Coordinates: 51°51′52″N 2°14′50″W / 51.8643941°N 2.24733611°W / 51.8643941; -2.24733611
Address Eastgate Shopping Centre, 22 Eastgate Street, Gloucester, GL1 1PA
Opening date July 3, 1973
Developer Land Improvements Ltd.
Owner Rockspring Property Investment Managers and The Other Retail Group (ORG)
No. of stores and services 53
No. of floors 2
Parking 380 (20 disabled spaces / 18 parent and child spaces)[1]
Website Official site

The Eastgate Shopping Centre (formerly The Mall, Eastgate and The Mall, Gloucester) is a two-story indoor shopping centre in Gloucester, England. It opened its portico entrance on 3 July 1973.[2][3]

History

Eastgate Market Entrance

Initially, the site was a market which was opened in 1786 at the same time as the Southgate Street market. In 1855, the Eastgate Street market was rebuilt and modernised. The indoor shopping centre was built between 1966 and 1974 during a large redevelopment of Gloucester City centre. The plans for this development were written by G.A Jellicoe in 1962 and also led to the demolition of several buildings included the Bell Hotel[4] and medieval streets in the north-east and south-east areas of the city centre. Eastgate Shopping Centre consists of a large indoor street, with a ninety degree intersection in the middle. It runs from Eastgate Street to Southgate Street, with a side entrance to Greyfriars. The indoor street is lined with shops on both sides. At this time the centre also included a new market hall and a large Woolworths store which had entrances onto both Eastgate and Southgate street. The centre linked to the Longsmith Street car park and Kings Walk car parks. A pedestrian footbridge on the second floor spanned over Eastgate Street to link the Eastgate and Kings Walk shopping centres however, this has now been closed off.[2][5] In 1994 redevelopment work was carried out which included some of the columns being faced with artitectual features and the Beatrix Potter clock and figures were added next to the market. The cemetery from Greyfriars, founded in 1231, is now under the Eastgate shopping centre.[6]The Mall Fund bought Eastgate shopping centre in 2004 for £40 million from Catalyst Capital,[7] then Rockspring Property Investment Managers and The Other Retail Group brought it in 2010 for £136 million.[8]

Portico Entrance

Eastgate Shopping Centre Portico Entrance

The Portico entrance was built by Medland & Maberly in 1856 and was originally the entrance to the Eastgate market.[9] In 1973, the portico was moved down Eastgate Street by about 25 feet from its original location to form the entrance to the new Eastgate Shopping Centre.[2][5] The portico is made out of classical stone blocks.[6] It is built in the monumental italianate style. The exterior consists of three arches with two central piers framed by a corinthian half column and two end piers framed by rectangular columns. All of the piers are set upon pedestals. Above the arches there is a crowning pediment with a clock in the middle flanked by seated figures sculpted in high relief. Father time is on the right and Ceres is the figure on the left. The crowning pediment supports an arched bell turret flanked by scrolls and topped with another pediment. There were pairs of Iron gates under each arch of the Portico. However, these were not replaced when it was rebuilt after being moved from the original site.[9] In 2015, the original Iron gates were found in a council yard by the Gloucester Rotary Club.[10] The portico became a grade II-listed building in 1975.[11]

Beatrix Potter Clock

In 1994, due to the redevelopment of the shopping centre a large fish tank, inside the shopping centre next to the market entrance, was removed and the Beatrix Potter clock was added to replace it.[2][12] The clock featured an animated Tailor of Gloucester, mice, owl and cat and took approximately fifteen months to build. On the hour, the clock would chime then music was played and all the figures would move. You would find crowds of people waiting to look at it.[13] In 2013, another redevelopment off the shopping centre took place the clock was removed having been there since 1994.[14] A petition to save the clock was created but the shopping centre donated it to the Pied Piper Appeal.[15]

References

  1. "Eastgate Centre Roof Top Car Park". Gloucester City Council. Retrieved 20 February 2017.
  2. 1 2 3 4 "Celebrating 40 years of the Eastgate Shopping Centre". The Citizen. 4 July 2013. Retrieved 19 February 2017.
  3. "A TIMELINE OF GLOUCESTER". Localhistories. Retrieved 19 February 2017.
  4. Amphlett, D. G. (2 February 2015). "Chapter 6: The Eighteenth Century". Gloucester: History You Can See.
  5. 1 2 "Gloucester, 1835-1985: Topography". British History Online. Retrieved 19 February 2017.
  6. 1 2 "City Centre Conservation Area" (PDF). Gloucestershire City Council. Retrieved 19 February 2017.
  7. "Mall fund in 123m Bristol purchase". Propertyweek. 25 June 2004. Retrieved 19 February 2017.
  8. "Gloucester shopping centre sold in multimillion pound deal". Insidermedia. 23 Aug 2010. Retrieved 19 February 2017.
  9. 1 2 "ENTRANCE PORTICO, EASTGATE SHOPPING CENTRE". Historic England. Retrieved 19 February 2017.
  10. "Original 1856 Gloucester market gates found in council yard". BBC News. 3 June 2015. Retrieved 24 February 2017.
  11. "Entrance Portico, Eastgate Shopping Centre, Gloucester". Britishlistedbuildings. Retrieved 19 February 2017.
  12. "Happy 40th birthday to Gloucestershire's Eastgate Shopping Centre". South West Business. 4 July 2013. Retrieved 20 February 2017.
  13. "Eastgate". Visit Gloucestershire. Retrieved 20 February 2017.
  14. "Major refurb at The Eastgate shopping centre to be unveiled". Gloucestershire Live. 28 September 2013. Retrieved 23 February 2017.
  15. "Petition to save Tailor of Gloucester clock in Eastgate Shopping Centre is 'too little too late'". South West Business. 3 October 2013. Retrieved 20 February 2017.
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