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The Market Centre is the largest shopping centre in Crewe. It is situated in the heart of the town centre with a few national retailers, including B&M, Poundstretcher and Peacocks. There are three large car parks nearby and Crewe bus station is a five-minute walk from the shopping centre. It has a weekly footfall of approximately 100,000 visitors.
Market Centre may refer to: The Market Centre, a shopping mall on Main Street, Letterkenny, Ireland; The Market Centre, a shopping mall in Crewe, England; Market centre, a location in Cockermouth, England
The Mall Blackburn, Blackburn (formerly Blackburn Shopping Centre) The Mall Chester, Chester (formerly The Mall Grosvenor / Grosvenor Shopping Centre) Manchester Arndale, Manchester; Marble Place Shopping Centre, Southport; The Market Shopping Centre, Crewe; Market Walk Shopping Centre, Chorley; Marketgate Shopping Centre, Lancaster
Crewe bus station in Crewe, Cheshire East, England, is a bus terminus for approximately 11 bus services. It opened to the public on 7th May 2024 [1] as part of the Royal Arcade development in Crewe town centre. The bus station is located on Delamere Street, with access also from Victoria Street.
The Market Shopping Centre was nominated for deletion. The discussion was closed on 05 December 2013 with a consensus to merge. Its contents were merged into Crewe. The original page is now a redirect to this page. For the contribution history and old versions of the redirected article, please see its history; for its talk page, see here.
After significant industrial growth, largely following the construction of the railway station which had opened in 1837, [2] Crewe became a municipal borough in 1877. [3] In this context, civic leaders decided to procure municipal buildings: the site chosen on the north side of Earle Street had been occupied by a row of commercial properties with an old corn exchange located behind them.
LOS ANGELES − California fast-food staple In-N-Out announced that it will close its office in Irvine as the company is set to split its corporate workforce between California and Tennessee.
The façade survives as the entrance to the Castle Quay Shopping Centre. [140] The Central Corn Exchange was also built in 1857, though the front to the Market Place was later than the main hall. The hall was of brick, with appropriate decoration in pressed brick, the detail loosely derived from 17th-century France.