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The Lion Yard shopping centre is a covered shopping centre in the city centre of Cambridge, England. [1] Construction work on the centre, which is bounded by St Andrew's Street , Corn Exchange Street , and Petty Cury , [ 2 ] commenced in 1970 and the development contained a library, multi-storey car park and magistrates' court .
The Grafton centre is a covered shopping centre in the east of central Cambridge, England.It is one of the three main shopping centres in Cambridge, with Lion Yard and Grand Arcade in the city's centre.
To the east is the Lion Yard shopping centre. Fisher House in Guildhall Street is a Grade II listed late 16th / early 17th century timber-framed building [1] [3] that houses the Cambridge University Catholic Chaplaincy. The Red Cow public house is also Grade II listed, built in 1898 in a Jacobethan style.
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The Grand Arcade on its opening day. The Grand Arcade is a large shopping centre in St Andrew's Street, Cambridge, England.It is anchored by the John Lewis & Partners department store, (formerly Robert Sayle) which is situated to the southeast of the site and which re-opened, following a major rebuild, on 8 November 2007, prior to the rest of the development, which opened on 27 March 2008.
The Mall Camberley, Camberley (formerly The Mall Main Square / Main Square) The Mall Maidstone, Maidstone (formerly The Mall Chequers / Chequers Centre / The Stoneborough Centre) The Mall Southampton, Southampton (formerly The Mall Marlands / Marlands Shopping Centre) The Malls, Basingstoke; Market Place, Burgess Hill. The Martlets, Burgess Hill.
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The long-lost red lion, formerly in the Lion Yard shopping centre in Cambridge The prototype for the Lion Brewery statue was made in wood, and was rediscovered in Woburn, Bedfordshire in the 1970s. [ dubious – discuss ] It was moved to Cambridge, where it was displayed at the new Lion Yard shopping centre, which had been named after a pub at ...