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The shopping park can be accessed from the A444 Phoenix Way, which links it to Coventry city centre, Bedworth, Nuneaton and the M6 Junction 3. [5] The Shopping Centre is served by a number of bus routes, some serving the bus hub at the southern edge of the site, and some serving the site from Longford Road ().
A new combined club shop and ticket office for Coventry City opened ahead of the 2021–22 season, this is the first time Coventry City have had a club shop at the arena since 2013 after relocating the club shop to Gallagher Retail Park and then to the Arena Park Shopping Centre, and the ticket office having been situated at the Butts Park ...
The site on Earl Street had previously been occupied by a row of shops. [3] A design for new municipal offices on the site was approved in 1895, but a dispute then arose as to whether shops should be incorporated into the ground floor of the new buildings; this was not swiftly resolved and, though the site was cleared, it remained vacant for ...
On 16 December 2007, IKEA's first city centre store in the UK was opened, in Coventry. [158] [159] On 4 February 2020, it was announced that IKEA's Coventry city centre store was to close the same year due to changing shopping habits and consistent losses at the store. [160]
FarGo Village is a creative quarter on Far Gosford Street, Coventry, England. Costing £5 million [ 1 ] and opened on 27 September 2014, [ 2 ] it is a mixture of mobile catering units, small boutique style units housed in repurposed shipping containers , [ 3 ] and larger stores surrounding a marketplace area.
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Ball Hill. Ball Hill is an area within the Stoke district of Coventry, West Midlands, England.It is to the east of Coventry city centre. [1]Walsgrave Road is the main street that runs through Ball Hill, which is a name that primarily defines the shopping area extending from the brow of the hill down to the junction with Clay Lane and Brays Lane.
Museums in Coventry before the Herbert included the museum of the Coventry City Guild and the Benedictine Museum, opened by J. B. Shelton in the 1930s. However, Coventry City Council's collection of art treasures and museum pieces were housed in various buildings, and so the council acquired a half-acre site over a number of years costing £35,375.