Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Highcross Leicester is a shopping centre in Leicester, England. It was opened as The Shires in 1991 to supplement the Haymarket Shopping Centre , also since re-developed. It was built on a central location within the city centre on Eastgates and High Street.
High Cross is the name given to the crossroads of the Roman roads of Watling Street (now the A5) and Fosse Way on the border between Leicestershire and Warwickshire, England. A naturally strategic high point, High Cross was "the central cross roads" of Anglo-Saxon and Roman Britain. [ 1 ]
Highcross: Leicester: East Midlands: 100,400 [4] 25 Telford Shopping Centre: Telford: West Midlands: 100,000 [12] 26 The Mall at Cribbs Causeway: Patchway, South Gloucestershire South West: 100,000 [2] 27 Westquay: Southampton, Hampshire South East: 95,600 [13] 28 Royal Victoria Place: Royal Tunbridge Wells, Kent South East: 93,200 [4] 29 ...
The notice covers the areas within Vaughan Way, St Margaret’s Way, Tigers Way, Oxford Street, Bath Lane and Highcross Street. Follow BBC Leicester on Facebook, on X, or on Instagram.
The documents for the High Cross Road scheme, from Third Revolution Projects, have been sent to Harborough District Council. These state the site, currently farmland, is approximately 38.4 ...
Highcross Leicester; S. Silver Arcade This page was last edited on 9 January 2021, at 00:43 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike ...
Haymarket Shopping Centre. The Haymarket Shopping Centre is a shopping centre in the city centre of Leicester, England.It was opened on 4 June 1973 [2] as part of the Haymarket Centre and was the country's second shopping centre after the Bull Ring, Birmingham. [3]
The city centre was the High Cross, at the junction of the current High Street and Highcross Street (in mediaeval times, High Street ran between the north and south gates along the line of the current Highcross Street, while the current High Street was called Swinesmarket). Leicester Cathedral [2] and the Guildhall occupy this old area of town.