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The increased popularity of the venue forced a move in location to bigger premises, [2] and Arcade Club moved to Ela Mill in Bury Greater Manchester, which included a venue that offered a variety of food and drinks. Containing over 400 original arcade machines/games, it is the biggest arcade in the continent of Europe. [3]
Great Western Arcade, Temple Row entrance Great Western Arcade. The Great Western Arcade (grid reference) is a covered Grade II listed [1] [2] Victorian shopping arcade lying between Colmore Row and Temple Row in Birmingham City Centre, England. It was built (1875-6) over the Great Western Railway line cutting at the London end of Snow Hill ...
Swan Court Shopping Arcade, Clitheroe; Trafford Centre, Trafford; Triangle Shopping Centre, Manchester; Washington Square, Workington; Wayfarers Shopping Arcade, Southport (formerly Burton Arcade / Leyland Arcade) Westmorland Shopping Centre, Kendal
A separate scheme to bulldoze the Odeon Arcade, which links Market Place and Cank Street, was refused and branded "overbearing" by Leicester City Council in September 2023.
They left the club in 1975 to play their own material of melodic rock. Occasionally other live acts played such as Quill and Jigsaw. [1] Regular late night clientele were Black Sabbath, Roy Wood, Quartz and other notable Birmingham bands calling in after local gigs. Actors and staff from the nearby Central TV Studios also frequented the club.
In the late 1990s, the venue underwent refurbishment and, in 2000, reopened as the Birmingham Academy. In 2002, it was then rebranded as the Carling Academy Birmingham . On 6 November 2008, it was announced that O 2 had purchased naming rights for all Live Nation's AMG venues , in a £22.5 million sponsorship deal, lasting until 2013.
The Library of Birmingham is on Broad Street. In the 1970s and 1980s, Broad Street was still very much a suburban high street. However, one prescient early manifestation of the street's future purpose as a fashionable partying district was the Rum Runner nightclub, which from the late 1970s restyled itself after New York City's Studio 54 and later London's Blitz club.
Grand Central (formerly The Pallasades Shopping Centre, previously Birmingham Shopping Centre) is a shopping centre located above New Street railway station in Birmingham, England, that opened in 1971 as Birmingham Shopping Centre. In 1989, it was largely refurbished and reopened on 17 September 1990 as The Pallasades Shopping Centre.