Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The roundabout is near the end of the former Deadlake, a sea inlet reclaimed at the end of the 19th century to form Victoria Park. It is located behind and above the Plymouth railway station and south of Central Park. The area is an assembly point for supporters of Plymouth Argyle Football Club, which is located nearby in Central Park.
Drake Circus Shopping Centre is a 425,000-square-foot (39,484 m 2) [2] covered shopping mall in the centre of Plymouth, England, which opened in October 2006. [3]The building was designed by London-based architects Chapman Taylor [1] and built by Bovis Lend Lease. [1]
Restaurant brunches may also be served from a menu, in which case guests select specific items that are served by waitstaff. Restaurant brunch meals range from relatively inexpensive brunches available at diners and family restaurants to expensive brunches served at high-end restaurants and bistros.
Derry's Clock Tower (or Derry's Cross) is a free-standing clock tower in the city of Plymouth, England. The clock and the nearby former bank are the only buildings to survive the Blitz and postwar development in the immediate area. On 1 May 1975, English Heritage listed the clock tower at Grade II for its architectural and historical importance ...
The Plymouth and South West Co-operative Society Limited, known locally as Plymco, was founded in 1859 by ten tradesmen. The society grew from 18 members, as recorded on 3 January 1860, to a membership of over 130,000. The department store business was sold to Vergo Retail in 2009. [1]
The Roundabout Club, formerly Sandy Town Hall, is a bar and music venue in Sandy, Bedfordshire, a town in England. It has never been the meeting place of any of the local authorities in the area. It has never been the meeting place of any of the local authorities in the area.
Charles Church was encircled by the construction of a roundabout ten years later. [5] When WWII ended it was decided not to rebuild Charles. Plymouth had expanded and most of the population was in the new suburbs rather than the city centre. It was decided to turn Charles into a living memorial of the 1,200 civilian deaths in the air raids.
Ford Park Cemetery is a 34.5-acre (140,000 m 2) cemetery in central Plymouth, England, established by the Plymouth, Stonehouse & Devonport Cemetery Company in 1846 and opened in 1848. [1] At the time it was outside the boundary of the Three Towns and was created to alleviate the overcrowding in the churchyards of the local parish churches. [1]