Freshney Place

Freshney Place

Eastern parking Freshney Place
Location Grimsby
Coordinates 53°33′58″N 0°05′11″W / 53.5662°N 0.0865°W / 53.5662; -0.0865
Opening date 1968 as Riverhead Centre
Owner F&C REIT (susidiary of Bank of Montreal)
No. of stores and services 100
Total retail floor area 46,450 m2[1]
Website www.freshneyplace.co.uk
Expanded and renamed Freshney Place in 1989

Freshney Place is an award winning shopping centre in Grimsby, North East Lincolnshire.[2] Located in the centre of Grimsby it is visited annually by 14 million shoppers and employs over 2000 retail workers.[3] The centre houses over 100 stores,[3] with the anchor stores of Marks and Spencer, House of Fraser, Next and Primark.[4]

Development

Constructed between 1967 and 1971 in a joint venture between the old Grimsby Borough Council and developers Hammerson's UK Ltd., it was known as the Riverhead Centre (so named as the development was adjacent to where the two local rivers, the Freshney and the Haven, meet). It is situated to the north of Victoria Street, the main pedestrianised shopping street of the town.

The Riverhead Centre development caused some controversy as it replaced old architecture with new, as was typical in the 1960s. It demolished much of the old town centre, including the historic Bull Ring (which is now where Wilkinson's, the Halifax Bank and the St James Hotel are based), and streets going back many centuries, including Flottergate (located at the present-day entrance to Freshney Place between British Home Stores and the market), Brewery Street (located at the present-day entrance to Freshney Place between Barclays and the offices of the Cheltenham and Gloucester), and East St Mary's Gate (no trace remains). During this reconstruction, the ornate Victorian branch of the Midland Bank was demolished; a building of contemporary design was incorporated into the new shopping centre. In 1983 Marks and Spencer purchased the local department store Lawson and Stockdale,[5] whose frontage ran along Victoria Street; they demolished the building and constructed a new store, linked to the centre.

In 1990 the council agreed to sell the surface parking area around the shopping centre to Hammerson's UK Ltd. The development owner and Humberside County Council, the highway authority, agreed to the sale of the area of Baxtergate, the road which ran to the rear of the shopping centre, between the shopping centre and the surface car park. Baxtergate was relocated alongside the River Freshney and became phase one of the Peaks Parkway.

Freshney Place 2008

Hammerson's UK Ltd began a £100 million redevelopment of the retail centre, doubling it in size. The expanded centre was covered in a glass roof. Two multi-storey car parks were constructed at each end of the centre; with this development, the old Top Town area of Grimsby was effectively privatised and roofed over. Stores are serviced at the first floor by ramps at the western end, which can accommodate even large vehicles. The ramp also provides access to the car park on the roof of the indoor market, which is operated by the local council. Freshney Place won a design commendation in the Refurbishment Category of the 1993 BCSC awards.[6]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/11/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.