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Spinningfields is an area of Manchester in Greater Manchester, England. It developed in the 2000s between Deansgate and the River Irwell by Allied London Properties . The £1.5 billion project consists of 20 buildings, totalling approximately 430,000 m 2 (4,600,000 sq ft) of commercial, residential, and retail space.
No.1 Spinningfields (formerly 1 Hardman Square) is a 92 m (302 ft) tall office tower in the Spinningfields district of Manchester city centre, England.. The development was previously known as 1 Hardman Square which was a proposed 140 m (460 ft) tall skyscraper but was cancelled in 2009.
1 The Avenue is a building in Spinningfields, Manchester, England. It is situated on Deansgate adjacent to the Grade I listed John Rylands Library. Architecture
A trip from MediaCityUK at Salford Quays to Spinningfields in Manchester city centre it is hoped would take 15 to 20 minutes. [37] Manchester Water Taxis ran boats from the Trafford Centre and Old Trafford to the city centre, taking around an hour from the Trafford centre to the city centre and 20 minutes from Old Trafford to the city centre. [38]
3 Hardman Street is a 16-storey high-rise building in Spinningfields, Manchester, England. At 75 m (246 ft), as of 2023 it is the third-tallest building in the Spinningfields area (after 1 Spinningfields and the Manchester Civil Justice Centre ) and the joint 36th-tallest building in Greater Manchester.
The main road for vehicle access is Great Marlborough Street, which has pay and display on-street parking for up to three hours. Macintosh Village is connected to the Manchester Inner Ring Road via the Mancunian Way flyover that passes 300 metres (980 ft) to the south of the Green Building, which provides access to the national motorway network.
The Hulme Arch Bridge over Princess Road. The original scheme for a new road through the rural area south of Manchester was the design of the urban planner Richard Barry Parker, who envisaged the creation of a parkway – a broad, landscaped highway – to run from the new garden suburb of Wythenshawe, connecting it with Manchester City Centre.
Most of Manchester is encompassed within the motorway, except for the southernmost part of the city (Wythenshawe and Manchester Airport) which is served by the M56. The M60 is 36.1 miles (58.1 km) long and was renamed the M60 in 1998, with parts of the M62 , M66 and all of the M63 being amalgamated into the new route, and the circle completed ...