Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The St. James Centre, later re-branded as St. James Shopping, was a shopping centre next to the former New St. Andrew House office building for the Scottish Office, in Edinburgh, Scotland. It was initially designed by Burke Martin Partnership in 1964 but was completed by architects Ian G Cooke and Hugh Martin of Hugh Martin & Partners after ...
The site is built on the site of the St. James Centre which closed in October 2016 and the adjoining New St Andrew House office, which was formerly occupied by the Scottish Office. [2] View of St James Quarter and W Hotel from Leith Street. The retail centre opened on 24 June 2021. [3]
The atmosphere in their St James's street showrooms is halfway between that of a fine tailor's and the waiting-room of a distinguished physician. The quiet, unruffled representatives of the firm (now in the B.S.A. group) at the Hooper stand at Earls Court give a reassuring impression of solid continuity. All their car bodies are still handmade.
The St. James Centre, at the east end of the New Town, was an indoor mall completed in 1970. Often considered an unwelcome addition to New Town architecture, it included a large branch of John Lewis. The St. James Centre (excluding John Lewis) closed on Sunday, 16 October 2016 and has been demolished.
The ICF made their way to a pub on Easter Road before the match and there was a brief skirmish with a couple of Hibs boys until the police arrived. Outside the St James Centre after the game the two mobs clashed with several Hibs casuals receiving serious injuries and one of them getting knocked out. [14] 13 November 1999
This is a list of the largest shopping centres in the United Kingdom, listed by retail size in square metres (m 2).Only centres with space of 65,000 m 2 (700,000 sq ft) or more are listed.
1.2 East of England. 1.3 East Midlands. ... Cameron Toll Shopping Centre, Edinburgh; ... St James Quarter (formerly St James Centre) Waverley Market, Edinburgh ...
Scottish Citylink [1] is a long-distance express coach operator in Scotland and Ireland (where it operates as Irish Citylink) and formerly England (where it operated as Stansted Citylink). The company was formed as a subsidiary of Scottish Transport Group in March 1985.