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Manchester Arndale is a large shopping centre in Manchester, England. [3] It was constructed in phases between 1972 and 1979, at a cost of £100 million. [ 4 ] Manchester Arndale is the largest of the chain of Arndale Centres built across the UK in the 1960s and 1970s.
Exchange Square is a tram stop on the Manchester Metrolink's Second City Crossing line, and opened on 6 December 2015 as part of Phase 2CC of the network's expansion. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It is located by the main entrance to the Manchester Arndale shopping centre, and is also close to the Printworks .
Spinning Gate Shopping Centre, Leigh, Greater Manchester; St George's Shopping Centre, Preston (formerly The Mall Preston, The Mall St. George) St. John's Shopping Centre, Liverpool; St. Nicholas Arcades Shopping Centre, Lancaster; Stretford Mall, Stretford (formerly Arndale Centre) Swan Court Shopping Arcade, Clitheroe; Trafford Centre ...
The bus station, designed by Jefferson Sheard Architects, replaced the former Cannon Street bus station, under the Manchester Arndale; since the redevelopment of Manchester city centre, the latter has disappeared along with Cannon Street itself. [4] The Bus station is now under the control of TfGM through the Bee Network (as of 2024). Bus station
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The Middleton Arena leisure centre as seen from LCpl Joel Halliwell VC Way. In the early 1970s, The Arndale Property Trust cleared land adjacent to Middleton Gardens to build an 'American-style' modern shopping precinct. The Middleton Arndale Centre commenced trading in 1971, although it was officially opened by the Duchess of Kent in March 1972.
The first Arndale Centre, in Jarrow, opened in 1961.It is now known as the Viking Centre. The Cross Gates Centre in Cross Gates, Leeds was an Arndale Centre until 2000.. In 1950, Arnold Hagenbach, a baker with a talent for property investment, and Sam Chippendale, an estate agent from Otley, set up a company called the Arndale Property Trust, the name being a portmanteau of "Arnold" and ...
By 1816, there were 86 mills in the central area of Manchester, and by 1853 there were 108. By the 1840s, the Northern Quarter was at the centre of one of the most significant economic changes in history, with the Industrial Revolution at full pace and Manchester taking its place as the world capital of the textile industry.