Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The station was redeveloped internally in the 1980s, with the addition of shops within the concourse, and above the western platforms as the "Victoria Place" shopping centre and 220,000 square feet (20,000 m 2) of office space. Platforms 16 and 17 opened on the site of the former taxi rank on 21 December 1987.
A new company, called Victoria Station Acquisition Corporation and was controlled by Lowell Farkas, purchased the Victoria Station trademark and 11 of the restaurants for $6.5 million and the assumption of a $1 million tax liability. [6] There was a similar chain called "Twickenham Station" in Alabama and Florida during the same time span.
It consists of 19 units which include shops, businesses, restaurants and fitness studios, i.e. Barry's. [2] Eccleston Yards was previously the site of Eccleston Place Power Station, owned by Westminster Electric Supply Corporation Ltd. which supplied electricity to the Mayfair & Belgravia area for the first time in 1891. [3]
Victoria bus station, outside Victoria railway station in 2007, with three bendy buses loading up. (This is not to be confused with Victoria Coach Station). Pleasance Pendred and three other suffragettes smashed the windows of various shops including the antiquities shop at 167 Victoria Street in 1913. [2] Victoria Station was built in 1860. [1]
Cardinal Place is a retail and office development in London, near Victoria Station and opposite Westminster Cathedral.The site consists of three buildings covering over a million square feet on Victoria Street next door to Portland House, and was designed by EPR Architects and built by Sir Robert McAlpine.
You are free: to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work; to remix – to adapt the work; Under the following conditions: attribution – You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made.
Victoria Coach Station was commissioned by London Coastal Coaches, a consortium of coach operators, and opened on 10 March 1932 by Minister of Transport John Pybus. [2] Wallis, Gilbert and Partners' distinctive Art Deco building [5] was originally built with spaces for 76 coaches, and a booking hall, shops, buffet, restaurant, lounge and bar ...
The Victoria Centre is a shopping centre and social housing complex in Nottingham, England, constructed by Taylor Woodrow between 1967 and 1972. It contains fashion and high street chain stores as well as cafes, restaurants, an indoor market , and the Nottingham Victoria bus station .