Manchester
The
City of Manchester is a major
city and
metropolitan borough in the
North of
England, historically notable for its central role in the
Industrial Revolution.Today it is a centre of the
arts, the
media,
higher education and
commerce andconsidered by some to be the country's
second city ["Manchester 'England's second city'", BBC, 12 September 2002, retrieved 2 May 2006.]["Manchester 'close to second city'", BBC, 29 September 2005, retrieved 2 May 2006.].The (administrative) city has a population of 437,000, whilst the
Greater Manchester Urban Area is home to
2,240,230 people.
Manchester is also well-known for its
sporting connections, being home to the world famous
Manchester United football club,
Manchester City football club and the
Lancashire County Cricket Club, and having hosted the
XVII Commonwealth Games in 2002.
Manchester city centre is on a "tentative list" of
UNESCO World Heritage Sitesâ€"mainly based around its network of canals and mills, which facilitated its development during the
Industrial Revolution of the nineteenth century
[[1]].
The city is named from the old
Roman name
Mamuciam, thought to be a
latinisation of the original
Celtic name (possibly
mamm meaning 'breast' or 'breast-like hill'), plus the
Old English ceaster, derived from the
Latin castra, meaning "camp".
Manchester is a
metropolitan borough with
city status.
Greater Manchester County consists of the City of Manchester and the other metropolitan boroughs which surround it:
Trafford,
Tameside,
Salford,
Wigan,
Bolton,
Bury,
Oldham,
Rochdale and
Stockport.
Manchester is situated within a bowl-shaped land area, bordered to the north and east by the
Pennine moors and to the south by the
Cheshire Plain. The city centre is located on the east bank of the
River Irwell, near the confluence of the
River Medlock and the
River Irk. The
River Mersey also flows through the south of the city. Much of the inner city, especially in the south, is flat, offering extensive views of the
moors from the floors of many tall buildings. Manchester's geographic features were highly influential in its early development as the world's first industrial city. These features are its climate, its proximity to a
seaport at
Liverpool, the availability of water power from its rivers, and its nearby coal reserves.
Manchester has a damp climate and a reputation as a rainy city. The average annual rainfall is 809 mm, meaning that its reputation is relatively undeserved.
For example, this total is less than that of
Plymouth,
Cardiff or
Glasgow. In international terms, Manchester receives substantially less rain than
New York City, which receives 1200 mm of rain in an average year, and its average annual rainfall total is comparable with that of
Rome. The precipitation is light, however, so a small volume of rain may take an hour to fall in Manchester, compared to several minutes of heavy rain experienced in Rome. Manchester also has a relatively high humidity level, which is why it is noted for being a fabric town (chiefly manufacturing cotton, but to the south silk).
|
The Bee, long a symbol of Manchester's industrial power during the nineteenth century, decorates the entrance hall of Manchester Town Hall. |
Earlier history
The Manchester area was settled in or before
Roman times. In the course of a campaign against the
Brigantes, the Roman general
Agricola set up a fort at Mancunium on the East bank of the Irwell. This temporary structure was rebuilt several times, and became an important staging post where the roads between the legionary fortresses of
Chester and
York, and the road northwards, crossed. There was a civilian settlement, or
vicus. An extremely rare
Christian word square was discovered in excavations some years ago. The North Gate of this fort has been reconstructed on the original site, together with a section of the fortress wall, and these may be found in the
Castlefield district, at the end of Deansgate.
The fort was abandoned in the
Dark Ages, and at some point in time the focus of settlement shifted from this spot to the confluence of the rivers
Irwell and
Irk. In medieval times, this area included a fortified manor house. Thomas De La Warre, a manorial lord who also happened to be a priest, gave the site to the church for use as a College of Priests around 1422, and commenced the construction of the Collegiate Church. The former is now
Chetham's School of Music, and the latter
Manchester Cathedral.
Manchester became a market town in 1301 when it received its Charter.
In the fourteenth century, Salford and Manchester became home to a community of
Flemish weavers who settled in the town to produce wool and linen, beginning the tradition of cloth manufacture.
Manchester was an important place in the county of Lancashire by the time of the
reformation. Perhaps the textile connections (which included the City Of London) resulted in the spread of
Puritanism and nonconformity. In 1642,
Lord Strange attempted to seize the militia magazine for the King. This was opposed, and the resulting casualty, one Richard Percival, is said to have been the first man to be killed in the
English Civil War. Lord Strange returned to besiege the town without success.
In 1745,
Charles Edward Stuart passed through the town en route to Derby. Upon the subsequent retreat, some luckless Manchester recruits were left to garrison Carlisle, where they surrendered to the British Army.
Defoe described Manchester as the "greatest mere village" in the first decade of the eighteenth century. Nevertheless, it was the
Industrial Revolution, particularly in the last quarter of the eighteenth century, that transformed a market town into a great city. Its damp climate was ideal for cotton processing, and with the development of steam-powered engines for spinning and weaving the cotton industry quickly developed throughout the region (for example,
Quarry Bank Mill in
Styal,
Cheshire). It also became an important distribution centre, populated by increasingly important warehouses.
The construction of the Duke's Canal, sometimes referred to as the
Bridgewater Canal, Britain's first true artificial inland waterway, spurred this development by the provision of abundant quantities of cheap coal. The opening of the
Liverpool and Manchester Railway, the first main line passenger railway in the world, also contributed to the town's rapid development.
Manchester quickly grew into the most important industrial centre in the world, and, significantly, the first industrial society. The pace of change was fast and frightening. At that time, it seemed a place in which anything could happen — new industrial processes, new ways of thinking (the so called 'Manchester School', promoting
free trade and
laissez-faire), new classes or groups in society, new religious sects, and new forms of labour organisation. It attracted educated visitors from all parts of Britain and Europe. "What Manchester does today," it was said, "the rest of the world does tomorrow."
Manchester's population exploded as people moved into the city from the surrounding countryside — and from other parts of the British Isles — seeking new opportunities. Particularly large numbers came from
Ireland, especially after the
Potato Famine of the 1840s. The Irish influence continues to this day, and every March Manchester plays host to one of the world's largest
St Patrick's Day parades. It is estimated that about 35% of the population of Manchester and Salford has at least some Irish ancestry. Large numbers of (mostly
Jewish) immigrants came to Manchester from central and eastern Europe. The area, including Salford and Prestwich, now has a Jewish population of about 40,000. This is the largest Jewish community outside London by quite some way. To these groups may be added (in later years) Levantines (involved in the Egyptian cotton trade), Germans, and Italians. By the end of the nineteenth century, Manchester was a very cosmopolitan place.
During the early years of the industrial revolution, as the population soared astronomically, overcrowding in the inner city areas became a serious problem, and the quality of ordinary people's living conditions suffered dramatically. Basic services such as clean water and proper sewage facilities were significantly absent, and the result was chronic sickness and diseases such as cholera and typhoid taking a heavy toll. Infant mortality was horrific; life expectancy for working class adults was very low.
Throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, Manchester was an important seat of radical, reformist politics. A famous meeting, held in furtherance of parliamentary reform, took place in St Peter's Field on
16 August 1819. It was to be addressed by
Henry Hunt, a powerful speaker known as "Orator Hunt". Local
magistrates, fearful of a large crowd, ordered volunteer
cavalry armed with
sabres to clear a way through the crowd to arrest Hunt and the platform party. They lost control (some reports suggest that many were drunk) and started to lash out at members of the crowd. The officers of a troop of
hussars of the
British Army were so appalled that they tried to restrain the volunteers. These events resulted in the (official) deaths of eleven people with over four hundred injured. The country was appalled. One of the dead had been present at the
Battle of Waterloo, and it was said that "Waterloo were a battle, but Peterloo (as the proceedings were satirically called) were nowt but bloody murder"
The so-called
Peterloo massacre became a
cause célèbre for reformers. Manchester was a focus of the movement to reform the
Corn Laws (the Anti Corn Law League (ACLL) was set up in 1836 by Cobden and Bright), and later the Free Trade movement known as "The Manchester School" or "Manchesterism" developed. Peterloo was a spur to obtaining municipal incorporation in 1838, when it became a
municipal borough, soon after the
Municipal Corporations Act 1835 allowed this.
City status for the borough was conferred in 1853. The town obtained its first MPs after the passing of the
First Reform Act.
The first
Trades Union Congress was held in Manchester (at the Mechanics' Institute, David Street), from
2 to
6 June 1868. Manchester was also an important cradle of the
Labour Party and the
Suffragette Movement.
Manchester's golden age was perhaps the last quarter of the nineteenth century. Many of the great public buildings (including the Town Hall) date from then. The city's cosmopolitan atmosphere contributed to a vibrant culture, which included the
Hallé Orchestra. In 1889, when county councils were created in
England, the municipal borough became a
county borough with even greater autonomy.
During this period, the
Manchester Ship Canal was created by the canalisation of the Rivers Irwell and Mersey for 36 miles from Salford to the Mersey estuary at the port of Liverpool. This enabled ocean going ships to sail right into the Port of Manchester Docks (technically in Salford). The docks functioned up until the 1970s, with their closure leading to a large increase in unemployment in the area.
Trafford Park in Stretford was the world's first industrial estate and still exists today, though with a significant tourist and recreational presence.
Manchester suffered greatly from the inter-war depression and the underlying structural changes that began to supplant the old industries, including textile manufacture.
During the [World War II,] Manchester was involved in heavy industrial construction — it was home to
Avro (now
BAE Systems) which built countless aircraft for the
RAF, the most famous being the
Avro Lancaster bomber. The city was attacked a number of times by the
Luftwaffe, particularly in the "Christmas Blitz" of 1941, which destroyed a large part of the historic city centre and seriously damaged the Cathedral.
In 1974, Manchester was split from the county of
Lancashire, and the Metropolitan Borough of Manchester was created.
Recent history
At 11.20 am on Saturday
15 June 1996, the
IRA detonated a large
bomb in the city centre, the largest to be detonated on British soil. Whilst this bomb caused over 200 injuries, it caused no deaths, and the principal damage was to the physical infrastructure of nearby buildings. The consequent reconstruction spurred a massive regeneration of the city centre, with complexes such as
The Printworks and the Triangle creating new city focal points for both shopping and entertainment. The following regeneration took almost a decade to complete, the latest part of the renovated
Arndale centre opened in April 2006. The last stage reopens in September 2006. In 2002, the city successfully hosted the
XVII Commonwealth Games, earning praise from many sources. Manchester has twice failed in its bid to host the
Olympic Games, losing to
Atlanta in 1996 and
Sydney in 2000.
Rapidly developing institutions attract
crime and disorder; see main article
crime and policing in Manchester.
Since the regeneration after the 1996 IRA attack, and aided by the
XVII Commonwealth Games, Manchester's city centre has changed significantly. Large sections of the city dating from the 1960s have been either demolished and re-developed or modernised with the use of glass and steel; a good example of this transformation is the Manchester Arndale Centre. Many old mills have been converted into apartments, helping to give the city a much more modern, upmarket look and feel. Some areas, like
Hulme, have undergone extensive regeneration programmes and many million-pound lofthouse apartments have since been developed to cater for its growing business community. The 168 metre tall, 47-storey Beetham Tower, completed in 2006, provides the highest residential accommodation in Europe - the lower 23 floors form the Hilton Hotel, while the upper 24 floors are apartments. The Beetham Tower was originally planned to stand 171 metres in height, but this had to be changed due to local wind conditions.
["City building reaches full height", BBC, 26 April 2006, retrieved 2 May 2006.]Manchester is represented by 4 tiers of government. These are:
# Manchester City Council# North West Regional Assembly# UK Parliament# European Parliament
The City of Manchester is also part of the Metropolitan County of Greater Manchester, which is still in legal existence; however, the metropolitan county council was abolished in the 1980s, leaving the City and the other boroughs as, in efect, unitary authorities, apart from some residual county-level functions (discussed below). The City consists of many well-recognised districts, but these districts do not represent a tier of government (though the names are used as political wards).
Manchester City Council
Manchester City Council is the local authority for the metropolitan borough of Manchester. The borough is divided into 32
wards, which elect a total of 96 councillors, three for each ward. Currently the council is controlled by the
Labour Party and is led by
Richard Leese.
Districts in the City of Manchester
Parishes
#
RingwayUnparished Areas
Showing former status (prior to 1974)
# Manchester (County Borough)
North West Regional Assembly
Whilst not a directly elected body, the
North West Regional Assembly is responsible for promoting the economic, environmental and social well-being of the
North West England region. It is made up of representatives from councils across the region, business organisations, public sector agencies, education and training bodies, trade unions and co-operatives and the voluntary and community sector.
UK Parliament
There are five UK Parliamentary constituencies which cover the City of Manchester, each of which elects one
Member of Parliament (MP) to the
House of Commons in London. These constituencies and their current MPs are:
*
Manchester Central -
Tony Lloyd MP (
Labour)
*
Manchester, Blackley -
Graham Stringer MP (Labour)
*
Manchester, Gorton -
Rt Hon Sir Gerald Kaufman MP (Labour)
*
Manchester, Withington -
John Leech MP (
Liberal Democrats)
*
Wythenshawe and Sale East (also covers part of Trafford) -
Paul Goggins MP (Labour)
European Parliament
North West England, as a single EU constituency, elects 9 representatives to the
European Parliament. The current
Members of the European Parliament (MEP) for the North West are:
* Mr Gary Titley (
Labour)
* Mr Den Dover (
Conservative)
* Mr Chris Davies (
Liberal Democrats)
* Mrs Arlene McCarthy (Labour)
* Mr John Whittaker (
UK Independence Party)
* Mr David Sumberg (Conservative)
* Mr Terry Wynn (Labour)
* Rt. Hon. Sir Robert Atkins (Conservative)
* Mr Sajjad Karim (Liberal Democrats)
Greater Manchester
|
Numbered map of Greater Manchester. |
Greater Manchester is a
metropolitan county which surrounds the City of Manchester. Including the City of Manchester, Greater Manchester is made up of 10 metropolitan boroughs, with each borough having its own council. Though these councils frequently have to interact with each other on a number of issues, they are completely independent of each other.
The 10 boroughs of Greater Manchester are:
#
City of Manchester#
Stockport#
Tameside#
Oldham#
Rochdale#
Bury#
Bolton#
Wigan#
City of Salford#
TraffordTowns in the Greater Manchester (County) area include
Sale,
Altrincham,
Cheadle,
Ashton-under-Lyne,
Oldham,
Bury,
Rochdale,
Stockport,
Stalybridge,
Wigan,
Middleton and
Stretford.
Whilst the county does not have its own tier of government, there are some functions of government organised at the county level.
County-wide functions
Law enforcement is carried out by
Greater Manchester Police. Fire protection is carried out by
Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service. Public transport is organised by the
Greater Manchester Passenger Transport Executive (GMPTE). There is also the
Greater Manchester Waste Disposal Authority.
=Law enforcement
=Greater Manchester is policed by the
Greater Manchester Police, who have their headquarters at Chester House in Trafford. The main police station in central Manchester is at Bootle Street, near to
Albert Square. There are other stations in
Salford,
Hulme,
Collyhurst,
Withington and
Longsight. Manchester's railways are policed by the nationwide
British Transport Police.
Manchester used to have its own police service until 1974, when its force and the lower divisions of
Lancashire Constabulary merged to from the Greater Manchester Police. Each of the 10 metropolitan boroughs of Greater Manchester has a Division within the county force.
*
Amsterdam â€"
Netherlands*
Chemnitz â€"
Germany*
Cordoba â€"
Spain*
Faisalabad â€"
Pakistan*
Rehovot â€"
Israel*
St Petersburg â€"
Russia*
Wuhan â€"
ChinaManchester has a large number of office buildings, and its
Central Business District is currently located in the centre of the city, adjacent to Piccadilly, focused on Mosley Street, Deansgate, King Street and Piccadilly. However, new office space is appearing at a rapid pace throughout the city, as its reputation as a high quality European Business Centre increases. Spinningfields is a large new development on land west of Deansgate, which will be a large, modern business centre, and home to several headquarters, squares and cafes. The first building to be produced on the site was the
Royal Bank of Scotland's new headquarters on Deansgate. The project is being spear-headed by
Sir Norman Foster. Other buildings include a 110 metre tall office building, a new justice centre and new
Crown Court, to be built over the next few years.
Just outside the city centre, a new business district is appearing in
Salford Quays, regenerated ex-shipping docks similar to London's
Docklands, and is home to headquarters and
call centres for many major companies. The recent announcement (June 2006) of the relocation of several
BBC departments to the Quays from London is sure to further expand the area as Greater Manchester's second major
Business District.
Shopping
Manchester is the main retail centre of the
North. There are two large
shopping malls; the
Manchester Arndale Centre in the middle of the city and the out-of-town
Trafford Centre. The city centre has a number of smaller shopping centres, including
The Triangle, which caters for a more youthful and upmarket clientele and the
Royal Exchange Centre. Manchester also has one of the largest
ASDA-WalMart supercentres in the UK, close to the
City of Manchester Stadium in Eastlands.
In the central shopping area of the city centre, road access is all but impossible, making journeys around the city on foot quicker, safer and more convenient. The pedestrianised
Market Street forms the core of the city centre's retail area. It is dominated on the north side by the Manchester Arndale and a branch of
Debenhams.
The Shambles contains a branch of
Harvey Nichols, a
Marks and Spencer store, and a branch of
Selfridges, as well as a variety of upmarket designer
boutiques.
Deansgate also has many shops, including the department store
House of Fraser (formerly Kendals), along with
pubs and bars.
King Street is an affluent shopping area where many exclusive fashion brands have stores. King Street also has many notable buildings preserved in a conservation area. Other hubs in the centre include St Ann's Square, and
Exchange Square.
Former stores, since gone, include
Lewis's, Henry's, and Affleck and Brown. The building that housed the latter is now known as
Affleck's Palace. It consists of low-cost stalls for independent traders and creatives. Affleck's is located on
Oldham Street, in the
Northern Quarter, along with a range of independent music, clothing and other shops.
Food and drink
Manchester has a vibrant and exciting range of restaurants, bars and clubs, spanning the famous "curry mile" in
Rusholme to traditional ‘grub',
Chinatown, modern bars and bistros at Deansgate Locks in the city centre. There are now many top class restaurants.
There is a
Hard Rock Cafe, chain restaurants such as
Wagamama and bars that include Waxy O'Connors and The Living Room. The coffee chain
Starbucks has 12 outlets in a 2 mile radius. Other, independent restaurants, bars and clubs can be found in the
Northern Quarter area of the city centre.
Regional favourites include the
Eccles cake. The traditional pie capital of the UK is supposedly at the heart of
Wigan, 15 miles outside the city.
Manchester is also famous for its beer, despite the closure of the
Boddingtons brewery in 2005.
Keg 'Boddies' is brewed by Interbrew in Luton but
cask Boddington's continues to be brewed in the city by
Hydes brewery in
Moss Side. Hydes is itself a long established independent brewery. Another Manchester brewer is
Joseph Holt, whose Derby Brewery in
Cheetham is just round the corner from the defunct Boddingtons Strangeways brewery. The Royal Brewery in Moss Side â€" not far from Hyde's â€" brews
McEwans lager.
J W Lees brewery is in
Middleton Junction, a few miles north of the city. There are also a notable number of
microbreweries producing smaller quantities of high quality
beer,
cider and
perry.
Breweries in Manchester and Salford which closed within the last twenty years include
Wilson's, whose
Newton Heath brewery closed in the late 1980's, and
Whitbread/Chester's in Salford.
Universities
Manchester is also home to three major
universities: The
University of Manchester and
Manchester Metropolitan University are to the south of the city. The former is the largest full-time non-collegiate university in Britain, and was created in autumn 2004 by the merger of
Victoria University of Manchester and
UMIST. Two miles to the west of the city centre in nearby
Salford is the
University of Salford.
With the
University of Bolton, the
Royal Northern College of Music and University Centre Oldham all nearby, Greater Manchester has a total student population of over 100,000.The
University of Manchester,
Manchester Metropolitan University and the
Royal Northern College of Music are all grouped together on the southern side of the city centre, and effectively form one large campus around Oxford Road.
Schools
Like most of the United Kingdom, most schools in Manchester are
state schools. Notable other schools include the
Manchester Grammar School (MGS) is an independent boys' school (ages 11-18) in Fallowfield, South Manchester. In the post-war period, it was a direct-grant grammar school which was not fee-paying, but it became an independent school in 1976 after the Labour government removed funding from direct-grant grammar schools. Originally situated in the centre of the city, in a prominent position close to the Cathedral, it has since relocated to Old Hall Lane in Fallowfield, to accommodate the growing student body. Its previous premises are now used by
Chetham's School of Music.
Manchester is very well served in terms of transport and infrastructure. The roads of Manchester are some of the most extensive in the UK and statistically
Greater Manchester has a higher percentage of the motorway network than anywhere else in the country. Mancunians are often adventureous, with high sales of tickets to international and national destinations with most travelling from
Manchester International Airport. The
Liverpool and Manchester Railway was the first passenger railway in the world. Today, Greater Manchester still has an extensive citywide railway network, and two mainline stations.
Other forms of
transport in Manchester are the famous
Black Cabs which are reasonably priced compared to other
cities and there are plenty of
taxi stands. You can also call for a minicab direct to your location, with many firms providing this service. The biggest in Manchester is Street Cars which is also the name of the taxi firm in
Coronation Street.
Air
Manchester International Airport, formerly Manchester Ringway Airport, is the third busiest airport in the UK in terms of passengers per year
[The busier airports are Heathrow and Gatwick.] and is served by
a dedicated railway station. In 2005 the airport handled 22.1 million passengers and provided direct flights to over 180 destinations worldwide by over 90 airlines. Long haul scheduled destinations served directly from Manchester include
New York (
JFK and
Newark ),
Chicago,
Boston,
Philadelphia,
Atlanta,
Orlando,
Miami,
Houston,
Las Vegas,
Toronto,
Port of Spain,
Antigua,
Barbados,
Damascus,
Dubai,
Abu Dhabi (starting Spring 2006),
Doha,
Tehran,
Karachi,
Islamabad,
Lahore,
Singapore,
Kuala Lumpur and (resuming in 2006),
Hong Kong. There are also firm plans for direct services to
Beijing and
Bangkok. Many European and domestic destinations are served. Manchester to London is the only high density airline route within England and is one of the busiest domestic sectors in Europe providing serious competition for the railways.
The airport has been voted the best airport in the UK by
Which Consumer Magazine, Travel Weekly Globe, Business Magazines International and in the Airport World's Service Excellence Awards (European runner up, second only to
Copenhagen).
Barton Aerodrome, one of the world's oldest airports, is still in operation. It is a very busy heliport and has small grass runways which deal with small aircraft. It also has the world's oldest operating control tower.
Road
Manchester like
London has a
ring road, the
M60. Unlike London the
M60 actually runs within the Greater Manchester conurbation providing good links, rather than around the conurbation as the M25 (London) does. It has 27 junctions, numbered consecutively clockwise, starting with Junction 1 at
Stockport in the south-east of the conurbation. The main motorways serving Manchester are the
M56,
M6,
M61,
M62 and
M66 motorways. Most of these routes link onto the
M60.
|
A view from inside Manchester's busiest railway station, Piccadilly. |
Rail
Manchester holds a pivotal position in
railway history as a birthplace of passenger rail travel on the
Liverpool and Manchester Railway, which opened in 1830 after the famous
Rainhill Trials chose
Stephenson's Rocket to pull the trains. In just 50 years the city centre was encircled by stations and termini, including
Manchester London Road, (now
Manchester Piccadilly),
Manchester Victoria,
Manchester Central,
Manchester Mayfield and
Manchester Exchange. Following the
Beeching Report in the 1960s, cutbacks followed, with
Manchester Central,
Manchester Mayfield and
Manchester Exchange closing to passengers. All rail services were then directed to
Manchester Victoria and
Manchester Piccadilly. High speed trains to
London are run from Manchester Piccadilly by
Virgin Trains, journeys typically taking around 2 hr 15 min. There are also several smaller stations remaining around the
City Centre, including
Manchester Oxford Road,
Deansgate and
Salford Central.
Although there is no
Underground Railway system similar to Glasgow's or London's, the city has had several failed attempts to create one including the infamous "Picc-Vicc", a heavy rail tunnel linking the main stations. Excavation work under the
Arndale Centre for this project began in the 1970s, but was soon abandoned due to costs and rumours of 'subterranean obstacles'. This may well have referred to the '
Guardian' underground nuclear bunker network, originally constructed by as a means of protecting communications in the city in the event of an atom bomb being deployed and now used by
BT.
The urban and suburban areas are covered by a sizeable network of rail lines, including lines to
Ashton-under-Lyne,
Bolton,
Oldham,
Stockport and
Wilmslow.
Metrolink
Manchester has a
tram system called
Metrolink. Operated by
Serco, the Metrolink links the city centre to
Altrincham,
Eccles and
Bury. It is a high-frequency service, with trams running every 6â€"12 minutes. It carries nearly 20 million passengers each year.
Plans to extend Manchester Metrolink were reinstated after an election-time
u-turn by the Labour Government which had previously rejected the plans months earlier, despite years of support. The Greater Manchester Passenger Transport Executive (
GMPTE), responsible for public transport in the area, led the fight to ensure that the extensions are to be built, with significant support from Local Councils and Communities, as well as the main
Manchester City Council.
["Get our Metrolink back on track", Manchester City Council, 25 November 2005; Retrieved 14 May 2006.] In July 2006 the government announced a major extension to the Metrolink system which is intended to form the first phase of the eventual so-called 'big bang' expansion. If the eventual desired system is completed, passenger numbers are predicted to more than double to an estimated 50 million per year.
A widely held view of many in Manchester of one of the major failings of the Metrolink is that it has never been extended to reach the
Trafford Centre (approx. 5 miles away in Trafford Park), with a wide possibility of routes for this task. The line from Manchester City Centre to
Eccles Town Centre is also judged by many to be a failure as it takes longer than an equivalent
bus journey following a similar route, but achieves this without the Metrolink's advantage of using 'Metrolink-only' specially dedicated / constructed routes.
Since Metrolink's inception and the initial euphoria at the huge success, by the public / local & national government / environmental groups it has become something of a victim of its own popularity. Many routes are extremely busy, especially at
peak times, and prices have risen at a rate far above that of
inflation.
Buses
Manchester and the surrounding area have an extensive bus network, with regular services in and out of the city connecting to all the satellite towns and villages. Maps of bus routes and a public transport journey planner for the Greater Manchester can be found on the
GMPTE website.
The city's buses are operated by a range of companies including
First,
Stagecoach (incorporating the lower-cost
Magicbus),
Finglands, UK North (also trading as GM Buses),
Arriva and R. Bullock. The major routes, with high passenger volumes, are well provided-for. These include Oxford Road/
Wilmslow Road, one of the busiest bus routes in Europe, bringing large numbers of students & commuters from
Fallowfield /
Withington /
Didsbury to the university buildings that have campuses scattered around the city centre, and the various office buildings — including the
BBC. Other routes that are not as commercially attractive, with smaller passenger volumes, are less well provided for, and the cost of a single journey can be similar to that of a Week Pass for the "South Manchester" journey.
First Manchester also operates free
Metroshuttle services which link important areas of the city, such as
Manchester Victoria,
Piccadilly and
Oxford Road stations with Chinatown, Deansgate,
Salford Central, and Albert Square. These services are very successful and therefore often busy. At present, there are three routes, numbered 1, 2 and 3, and coloured orange, green and purple respectively. They run every 5-10 minutes and complement the Metrolink and National Rail services, linking them with the city's car parks, tourist attractions and bus termini.
Those arriving at
Manchester Piccadilly Bus Station, and needing to take a
train from
Manchester Piccadilly, can choose either a
Metrolink or the free
Metroshuttle. It should be noted, however, that if one sits waiting on the
Metroshuttle for 10 minutes one could have easily walked the distance to the
Train Station, less than 1/2 mile away.
High frequency
bendy bus routes include the
Bury-Manchester 135 service and the
Bolton-Manchester 8 service, which operate every ten minutes.
Manchester's principal bus station mainly for services on the south side of the city is at
Piccadilly Gardens, which is also served by
Metrolink and a short walk from the city's main train station,
Piccadilly. Shudehill Bus/Metrolink Interchange caters for routes mainly on the north side of the city and is within walking distance of the
Victoria station. Long-distance coaches — operated mainly by National Express — serve the Manchester Central Coach Station at Chorlton Street. This smart, modern station opened in March 2002 and replaced the old Chorlton Street coach station, on exactly the same site. The old station was notorious for crime and prostitution.
Water
One legacy of the industrial revolution is an extensive network of
canals: the
Manchester, Bolton & Bury Canal,
Rochdale Canal,
Manchester Ship Canal, which provides access to the sea,
Bridgewater Canal,
Ashton Canal, and the Leigh Branch of the
Leeds & Liverpool Canal. Today, most of these canals are used for recreation.
The Manchester area is supplied with water by numerous artificial lakes, built on the former small rivers around the city. In some cases these lakes form long chains, as in
Longdendale.In the past, the city also had a "pressurised water" power supply system, a predecessor of the modern electricity network. Manchester also had Britain's first sewer network, which still exists today. This network may be one of the factors that prevents Manchester from having an underground rail system.
Nightlife
There has long been a thriving
nightclub culture in Manchester. UK broadcaster
Jimmy Savile is credited as becoming the first modern
DJ by using twin turntables for continuous play after he obtained two domestic record decks welded together. He first used this device to play to the public in 1946, at a nightclub called The Ritz on Whitworth Street (which had opened in 1927). Tony Prince is credited as becoming the world's first full-time club DJ in 1964 when Savile, who was then a Mecca manager in Manchester, told him that
Top Rank considered him to be the first person to be on their payroll as a pure DJ.
Many
teenagers of the 1960s developed a love for
Northern Soul, which had as two of its epicentres the
Wigan Casino and Manchester's
Twisted Wheel Club, and is credited as being instrumental in the development of the
Motown Sound.
Rob Gretton, members of
New Order (the band formed from the remaining members of
Joy Division after singer
Ian Curtis' suicide) and
Factory Records boss
Tony Wilson opened Fac 51
The Hacienda on Whitworth Street in 1982. It quickly became the focus of
electronic music and the start of
house music, the
Madchester sound, and the
Ibiza scene, which all came together in the
Summer of Love in 1988. The Hacienda was also at the setting of the 2002 movie
24 Hour Party People.
Other historical clubs and nights in Manchester include
*"Naked under leather" — one of the UK birthplaces of
Electronic Music.
*"The Number One" — the first
gay rave/house club.
*"Bowlers" — home of
happy hardcore.
*"Paradise Factory" and "The Breakfast Club" at Manto.
*"
Rockworld".
*"Home".
*"Flesh".
*"Homoelectric".
*"Danceteria".
One of the oldest and most diverse venues is the
Band on the Wall, a live music venue in the
Northern Quarter area of the city. This venue was built around 1862 as the flagship pub of a local brewery; it was originally called The George & Dragon. It got its nickname in the late 1920s or early 1930s from the stage high on the back wall. In 1975 it was taken on by jazz musician Steve Morris and his business partner Frank Cusick, and renamed The Band on the Wall.
Further reading
*Simon Reynolds
Energy Flash: Journey Through Rave Music and Dance Culture Picador, 1998, ISBN 0330350560.
*Sean Bidder
The Rough Guide to House Music, Rough Guides, 1999, ISBN 1858284325.
*Dave Haslam
Madchester, England Fourth Estate, 2000, ISBN 1841151467.
*Mick Middles
From "Joy Division" to "New Order": The True Story of Anthony H.Wilson and Factory Records Virgin Books, 2000, ISBN 0753506386.
*Bill Brewster & Frank Broughton
Last Night a DJ Saved My Life: The History of the Disc Jockey, Grove Press, 2000, ISBN 0802136885.
*Dave Haslam
Adventures on the Wheels of Steel: The Rise of the Superstar DJs Fourth Estate, 2002, ISBN 1841154334.
*Sean Bidder
Pump Up the Volume: A History of House Music, MacMillan, 2002, ISBN 0752219863.
*Tony Wilson
24-hour Party People Channel 4 Books, 2002, ISBN 075222025X.
*Keith Rylatt, Phil Scott
CENtral 1179: The Story of Manchester's Twisted Wheel Club BeCool Publishing 2001 ISBN 0953662632
Art
There are many
art galleries in Greater Manchester, notably:
*
The Lowry in
Salford Quays (Salford), which houses works by the
Salford painter
L. S. Lowry*
The Athenaeum*
Salford Museum and Art Gallery (Salford)
*
Manchester Art Gallery* The
Whitworth Art Gallery* The
Chinese Arts Centre*
Cornerhouse* The
Castlefield Gallery*
Cube Gallery*
Comme Ca Art Gallery*
The Barn GalleryMuseums
Museums in Manchester include:
*
Greater Manchester Police Museum*
Imperial War Museum North (Trafford Park)
*
Manchester Jewish Museum*
Manchester Museum*
Museum of Science and Industry*
Pankhurst Centre*
People's History Museum*
Urbis, a museum of city life
*
The Gallery of CostumeClassical music
Manchester is home to two
symphony orchestras, the
Hallé Orchestra and the
BBC Philharmonic Orchestra. There is also a
chamber orchestra, the
Manchester Camerata.
For many years the city's main classical venue was the
Free Trade Hall on Peter Street. Since 1996, however, Manchester has had a modern 2,500 seat concert venue called the
Bridgewater Hall, which is also home to the Hallé Orchestra. The hall is one of the country's most technically advanced classical music and lecture venues, with an acoustically designed interior and suspended foundations for an optimum sound. Other venues for classical concerts include the
RNCM, the
Royal Exchange Theatre and
Manchester Cathedral.
Manchester is a centre for musical education, being home to the
Royal Northern College of Music and
Chetham's School of Music.
In the 1950s the city was home to the so-called ‘Manchester School' of classical composers, which comprised
Harrison Birtwistle,
Peter Maxwell Davies and
Alexander Goehr.
Popular music
For Mancunians, the popular musical heritage of the city has always been a source of great pride. The city's eclectic mix of music has created the sense among its inhabitants that Manchester is the most important city in world music.
Local groups and bands have included:
*
The Bee Gees*
The Hollies*
The Mindbenders*
10cc*
Buzzcocks*
Slaughter and the Dogs*
Magazine*
A Certain Ratio*
Joy Division*
New Order**(the previous three on local label
Factory Records)
*
The Smiths*
The Fall*
M People*
Badly Drawn Boy*
Doves*
Oasis*
Cleopatra*
the Chameleons*
Elbow*
Simply Red*
Nine Black Alps*
Take ThatAs well as "
Madchester" scene bands:
*
the Happy Mondays*
The Charlatans UK*The
Inspiral Carpets*
James*
The Stone RosesThe Chemical Brothers (from southern England) formed in Manchester. Also, ex-
Stone Roses frontman
Ian Brown has forged a successful solo career, as has ex-
Smiths leadman
Morrissey.
In 1965, on the
U.S. Hot 100, a unique hat-trick of
number 1s took place in the
spring, all from Mancunian pop groups.
Freddie and the Dreamers spent two weeks at the top with "I'm Telling You Now" (between
April 10â€"24),
Wayne Fontana and the Mindbenders one week with "Game of Love" (
April 24),and finally
Herman's Hermits with "Mrs Brown, You've Got a Lovely Daughter", a further three weeks (
May 1â€"22), a total of six weeks, an achievement never matched even in the
UK Top 50.
Manchester's main popular music venue is the
Manchester Evening News Arena, situated next to
Manchester Victoria railway station, which seats over 21,000 and is the largest arena of its type in
Europe, voted
International Arena of the Year, beating
New York's
Madison Square Garden. Other major venues include the
Manchester Apollo and the
Manchester Academy. The many smaller venues throughout the city, such as the Bierkeller, the Roadhouse and Night and Day Cafe, ensure that Manchester's music scene is always vibrant and interesting.
The famous American anti-war hippie
musical from the late
sixties,
Hair, includes a song entitled "Manchester, England" though the mention of the city in the song's title is somewhat irrelevant and merely used as punctuation in the song's lyrics.
Literature
Famous writers from the Manchester area include
Elizabeth Gaskell and
Anthony Burgess, the author of
A Clockwork Orange.
W. G. Sebald lived in Manchester when he first came to England, and the city features prominently in his novel
The Emigrants. Jeff Noon, the author of
Vurt, writes novels which take place in Manchester.
Charles Dickens was known to visit the city, and
Karl Marx and
Friedrich Engels are known to have found much to inspire their thoughts and writing when visiting the city during the
Industrial Revolution.
Manchester is home to the
Manchester Metropolitan University Writers School, one of the top creative writing schools in the country. The Writer's Bureau â€" a private company set up to help new freelance writers through its home-study courses â€" also runs its offices from the city. Local poet and author Mike Duff has lived his entire life in the city; he is a passionate advocate of Manchester and its people.
From October 2006 it is also home to the Manchester Literature Festival.
Theatre
Manchester is noted for its excellent theatres. Larger venues include
the Manchester Opera House, a commercial theatre promoting large scale touring shows which regularly plays host to touring
West End shows, the
Palace Theatre and the
Royal Exchange Theatre, a large producing theatre located in Manchester's former cotton exchange. The
Library Theatre is a small producing theatre situated in the basement of the city's central library and the
Lowry is a large touring venue in Salford, and
Studio Salford, the Manchester Evening News-award winning theatre and music venue at Bloom Street, Salford.
Smaller sites include the
Green Room, which focuses on fringe productions and
Contact Theatre, a theatre for young people with a bold contemporary design. The
Dancehouse is a theatre dedicated to dance productions. The city is also home to two highly-regarded drama schools; The
Manchester Metropolitan University School of Theatre and the Arden School of Theatre. In addition the Royal Northern College of Music (RNCM) has 4 theatre spaces especially noted for its opera and classical music productions.
Venues
As well as many sporting venues Manchester has many venues for performances and conventions:
*
G-Mex*
Manchester International Conference Centre*
Bridgewater Hall*
Lowry*
MEN Arena*
Manchester AcademySport
Sport and especially football are an important part of Manchester culture. Two major
football clubs,
Manchester United and
Manchester City, bear the city's name. Manchester City play at the
City of Manchester Stadium, while Manchester United's
Old Trafford ground, the largest club football ground in England, is just outside the city proper in the borough of
Trafford.
It is commonly perceived that Manchester City have more local support than United. However, research by Manchester University a few years ago showed that United had 9,000 season ticket holders within the 'M' postcode area whilst City had 7,000. The Manchester postal district includes the (strongly United supporting) city of Salford but also Prestwich and Whitefield (with one of the largest City supporters club's) and areas such as Denton, where the Blues also have strong support. This research was done before City moved to the (larger, 48,000 capacity) City Of Manchester stadium. And well before the expansion of United's Old Trafford which will accommodate 76,000 by summer 2006. The truth is that nobody knows for sure which team has the most local support and that the figures are probably too close to call. What is beyond doubt is that United's nationwide and international support far exceeds that of City, so City have larger local support as a proportion of their fan base.
City and United are just two examples of local football teams: according to the
Urbis centre, Greater Manchester has the highest concentration of football clubs per capita of anywhere in the world. Other professional football teams in Greater Manchester include
Oldham Athletic,
Stockport County,
Bury,
Wigan Athletic,
Rochdale and
Bolton Wanderers.
Many first class sporting facilities were built for the 2002
Commonwealth Games, including the
Manchester Velodrome, the
City of Manchester Stadium, the
National Squash Centre and the
Manchester Aquatics Centre.
Old Trafford cricket ground, home of
Lancashire County Cricket Club, hosts many
first-class cricket and important international matches including Test Matches.
The Greater Manchester area is also represented in rugby union by
Sale Sharks, who currently play their home games at Edgeley Park in
Stockport and
Manchester R.C.; and in Rugby League by
Wigan Warriors, who share the
JJB Stadium with
Wigan Athletic,
Salford City Reds, who are currently in the process of constructing a new state-of-the-art stadium in Eccles, over the
Manchester Ship Canal from the
Trafford Centre,
Oldham Roughyeds and
Rochdale Hornets. Manchester is also home to
Swinton Lions who play at Sedgley Park.
Belle Vue Stadium in
Gorton is home to the
Belle Vue Aces speedway team and also hosts regular
greyhound races.
Manchester also has an
ice hockey team called the
Manchester Phoenix who are in the process of building an arena called the
Altrincham Ice Dome. The city was previously home to the
Manchester Storm ice hockey club who in 1997 played in front of the largest audience ever to watch an ice hockey game in the United Kingdom when 17,245 people saw the Storm defeat the
Sheffield Steelers 6-2 at the
MEN Arena.
Manchester is a successful sporting city with many famous sporting people heralding from the city as well as from the surrounding area of
Greater Manchester. Manchester has also competed twice to host the
Olympic Games being beaten by
Atlanta in 1996 and
Sydney in 2000.
It was announced in 2005 that various sporting arenas around the city will be used in the
2012 Olympics.
Gay and lesbian
Manchester has the UK's largest gay population outside of London, and is renowned for its
gay village; centred around the
Canal Street area the gay village is home to various gay shops, restaurants, bars and clubs. On the last weekend in August it hosts the
Manchester Pride Festival (previously known as
Mardi Gras and Gayfest). Manchester's gay culture was brought to mainstream attention in 1999 by the acclaimed and controversial
Channel 4 drama series
Queer as Folk, which was set in the village. It is also the birthplace of several gay rights organisations including the
Campaign for Homosexual Equality and the
Queer Youth Alliance. Manchester has its own gay sports teams, Village Manchester FC (
soccer), Northern Wave (
swimming) and Village Spartans (
Rugby) which take part in Manchester's annual Pride Games. The year round
gay and lesbian heritage trail exhibits Manchester's gay history. Manchester's claim to status of gay capital of the UK was strengthened in 2003 when it played host city to the annual
Europride festival. The Lesbian and Gay Foundation, Britain's biggest gay charity, is based in Princess Street in the city centre.
Television and radio
ITV franchisee
Granada Television has its original headquarters on Quay Street in the Castlefield area of the city. The city is where programmes including
Coronation Street and many
Children's ITV presentations are produced.
The
BBC has its headquarters for the North West in New Broadcasting House on Oxford Road in the south of the city. Programmes including
A Question of Sport,
Mastermind and
Real Story are made here. Manchester is also the regional base for the
BBC One North West Region so programmes like
North West Tonight are produced here. The BBC intends to relocate large numbers of staff and facilities to Manchester or Salford from London, once a new, larger site has been selected. The Children's(
CBBC), Comedy, Sport (
BBC Sport) and New Media departments are all scheduled for a move from London to Manchester or Salford before 2010.
Manchester has its own television channel,
Channel M, owned by the
Guardian Media Group and operated since 2000. It also has several local radio stations including
BBC Radio Manchester,
Key 103,
Galaxy,
Piccadilly Magic 1152,
105.4 Century FM ,
100.4 Smooth FM,
Capital Gold 1458 and
Xfm. There is a
community radio network coordinated by Radio Regen, and with stations covering the South Manchester communities of
Ardwick,
Longsight and
Levenshulme (
ALL FM 96.9) and
Wythenshawe (Wythenshawe FM 97.2)
Several now defunct radio stations are much lamented including Sunset (which became) Kiss 102 (now Galaxy) and KFM which became Signal Cheshire (now
Signal 1). The latter three played a significant role in the city's emerging
House music culture, also known as the
Madchester scene, which was partly based around clubs like the
the Hacienda which had its own show on Kiss 102. There were also scores of
pirate radio,
student radio (currently consisting of Fuse FM at the
University of Manchester and Shock FM at the University of Salford) and
community radio stations and initiatives in Manchester.
BBC Radio Manchester, which became BBC GMR in 1988, returned to its former title in 2006.
The character of
Daphne Moon in
Frasier (the role which eventually made
Jane Leeves the highest-paid British actress on television) came from Manchester.
Film
Manchester is home to the Manchester film festival and has held the commonwealth film festival.
Even
Hollywood has featured Manchester occasionally in its films.
My Son, My Son!, made in 1940, directed by
Charles Vidor and starring
Brian Aherne and
Louis Hayward, is set in Manchester, and in
MGM's all-star opus of 1932,
Grand Hotel, most of
Wallace Beery's dialogue seems to consist of him furiously shouting "Manchester!" throughout his entire part. Manchester over the years has shot many films from the
Ewan McGregor blockbuster
Velvet Goldmine to
Sir Alec Guinness's
The Man in the White Suit.
Magazines and newspapers
The Guardian newspaper was founded in Manchester in 1821 as
The Manchester Guardian. Its head office is still in Manchester, though many of its management functions were moved to
London in 1964. It still shares a Manchester office on Deansgate with its sister publication, the
Manchester Evening News, Manchester's biggest-selling daily paper now free within the city centre, and Greater Manchester's biggest-circulation newspaper, the free weekly Manchester Metro News. Other free commuting papers include
Metro North West, both of which are available from
Metrolink stops, rail stations and other busy locations across the city at rush-hour.
For many years most of the national newspapers had important offices in Manchester:
The Daily Telegraph,
Daily Express,
Daily Mail,
The Daily Mirror,
The Sun. Only
The Daily Sport remain based in Manchester. At its height 1,500 journalists were employed. But in the 1980s office closures began and today the "second Fleet Street" is no more. A late attempt to launch a Northern daily newspaper,
North West Times, floundered in the late 80s lasting just three months. Another attempt is soon to be made with the
North West Enquirer, which will be Manchester based, and will provide a true "regional" newspaper for the
North West, much in the same vein as the
Yorkshire Post does for
Yorkshire or
The Northern Echo does for the
North East.
There are several local lifestyle magazines, including 'Moving Manchester' amongst others.
Architecture
 |
HSBC Bank, on Spring Gardens. |
|
The Urbis museum and garden |
Manchester has a wide variety of buildings mainly from
Victorian architecture through to modern. Much of the architecture in the city harks back to its former days as a global centre for the
cotton trade. Many warehouses have now been converted for other uses but the external appearance remains mostly unchanged so the city maintains much of its original character.
Manchester also has a number of
skyscrapers. Most were built during the sixties and seventies. However, in the last few years there has been a renewed interest in building
skyscrapers in Manchester. Numerous residential and office blocks are under construction or have recently been built in the city centre.
Beetham Tower is currently under construction. When completed it will be the tallest building in the
UK outside London. However, this status may be short lived, an even taller building is proposed behind
Manchester Piccadilly station.
Other structures of interest in Manchester include:
* The
Bridgewater Hall, home of the
Hallé Orchestra* The
Corn Exchange (now the Triangle shopping centre)
* The
G-Mex Centre
*
John Rylands Library, Deansgate
*
London Road Fire Station*
Manchester Central Library, St Peter's Square, by
E. Vincent Harris*
Manchester Town Hall by
Alfred Waterhouse, extended by E. Vincent Harris
*
Midland Bank building (now HSBC Bank plc), King Street by Sir
Edwin Lutyens* The
Midland Hotel* Piccadilly Gardens by
Tadao Ando*
Palace Hotel* The
Portico Library* The
Royal Exchange*
South Manchester Synagogue*
Strangeways Prison by Waterhouse
*
Sunlight House* Trinity Bridge over
River Irwell by
Santiago Calatrava*
Victoria station* The
Victoria Baths*
Urbis Museum designed by
Ian SimpsonPublic monuments
Within Manchester there are monuments to numerous people and events that have helped to shape the city and influence the wider community. Two large squares,
Albert Square, in front of
Manchester Town Hall, and
Piccadilly Gardens hold many of Manchester's public monuments.
Notable monuments elsewhere in the city include the
Alan Turing Memorial situated in Sackville Park close to
Canal street remembers the father of modern computing. A monument to
Abraham Lincoln in Lincoln Square marks the
cotton famine of 1861â€"1865. Finally, the success of the 2002 Commonwealth Games is commemorated by
B of the Bang, Britain's tallest sculpture, located near the City of Manchester Stadium.
Streets and plazas
Manchester has a number of busy squares, plazas and shopping streets. Many of Manchester city centre's streets are now pedestrianised with numerous other streets having
Metrolink or Bus priority, this makes driving around Manchester City Centre complicated. One of the oldest thoroughfares is
Market Street. This was originally called
Market Stede Lane. Much of the
medieval street pattern, around the original Market Place was cleared as part of 1970s developments. Ancient streets such as Smithy Door were lost forever. One ancient street to survive is Long Millgate, which led north from the old Market Place. This winding lane, crossing Fennel Street and leading on to Todd Street (formerly Toad Lane - thought to be a corruption of T'owd Lane - Old Lane) is now an attractive and peaceful thoroughfare, bounded by gardens. Whitworth Street is a broad
19th century route, stretching from
Deansgate to London Road, running parallel to the
Rochdale Canal for much of its route, and intersecting with Princess Street, Chepstow Street and Albion Street along the way. The street is bounded by impressive brick buildings, formerly warehouses, but now mostly residential developments.Mosley Street runs roughly parallel to Portland Street, Whitworth Street and Deansgate, leading from Piccadilly Gardens to
St Peter's Square. The street is closed to general traffic, with the
Metrolink running trams along its route.Another
Victorian addition to the city's street pattern was Corporation Street, which cut through slums to the north of Market Street and provided a direct link from Cross Street (and the newly constructed
Albert Square) to the routes north of the city.
To the south of the city centre,
Wilmslow Road is the hub of much student life and is home to Manchester's
curry mile.
Other notable places in Manchester include:
*Great Northern Square
*Spring Gardens
*Cathedral Gardens
*New Cathedral Street
*The Gay Village
*
Chinatown â€" the largest
Chinatown in the UK and the second largest in Europe
The
Anglican Diocese of Manchester was established in 1847. Manchester lies within the
Roman Catholic Diocese of Salford . Manchester is in the
Central North Division of the
Salvation Army. Manchester also has a large
Muslim population and the UK's largest
Jewish community outside London.
Manchester has also has an
Anglican cathedral, St George's Cathedral. It was built over a period of 600 years and is built in the Gothic Style.
*See also:
The Salvation Army in ManchesterManchester and its conurbation are home to a number of foreign
consulates and commissions:
* â€"
Australian Consulate: Chatsworth House, Lever Street, Manchester M1 2QL Tel: 0161 228 1344 Fax: 0161 236 4074
* â€" High Commission People's Republic of
Bangladesh* â€" Consulate of
Belgium : 76 Moss Lane Bramhall, Stockport, SK7 1EJ, Tel. 0161 439 5999
* â€" Consulate General of The
People's Republic of China: Denison House, Denison Road, Rusholme, Manchester M14
* â€" Trade Office of
Denmark: 4th Floor, Arkwright House, Parsonage Gardens, Manchester M3
* â€" Trade Commission of
France: 24th Floor, Sunley Tower, Piccadilly Plaza, Manchester M1
* â€" Consulate of
France: Davis Blank Furniss, 90 Deansgate, Manchester M3 2QJ Tel. 0161 832 3304
* â€" Consulate General of
Germany: Westminster House, 11 Portland Street, Manchester, M60 1HY, Tel. 0161 237 5255
* â€" Trade Board of
Ireland: 56 Oxford Street, Manchester M1
* â€" Consulate of
Italy: Rodwell Tower, 111 Piccadilly, Manchester M1
* â€" Consulate of
Monaco: Dene Manor, Dene Park, Manchester M20
* â€" The Royal Consulate of
the Netherlands: 123 Deansgate, Manchester M3
* â€" Vice-consulate of
Pakistan: 4th Floor Hilton House, 26/28 Hilton Street, Manchester M1.
* â€" Consulate General of
Spain: 1a Brook House, 70 Spring Gardens, Manchester M2 2BQ
* â€" Consulate General of
Switzerland: 24th Floor, Sunley Tower, Piccadilly Plaza, Manchester M1
In addition, the
British Council maintains a headquarters building in the city centre.
Image:Manchester_staduim.jpg|City of Manchester StadiumImage:Manchester Exchange Squares.jpg|Exchange SquareImage:Manchester Piccadilly station approach - April 11 2005.jpg|Piccadilly StationImage:Piccadilly Gardens, Manchester.jpg|Piccadilly GardensImage:2004-10-09 Royal Exchange.jpg|Royal ExchangeImage:Manc St Peters Square.jpg|Manchester Central LibraryImage:Piccadilly-plaza.JPG|Piccadilly PlazaImage:Piccadilly-gardens.JPG|Market StreetImage:CIS Tower.jpg|CIS TowerImage:2004-10-09 Manchester Cathedral.jpg|Manchester CathedralImage:ManchesterTownHall OwlofDoom.jpg|Manchester Town HallImage:ManchesterAlbertSquare.jpg|Albert SquareImage:UrbisManchester20051020 CopyrightKaihsuTai.jpg|UrbisImage:2004-10-09 MOSI.jpg|Museum of Science and IndustryImage:ImperialWarMuseumNorth01.jpg|Imperial War Museum NorthImage:Beetham Tower Manchester April 2006.jpg|Beetham TowerImage:ManchesterOldPubs.jpg|Historic Pubs near Exchange SquareImage:ChanalStreetManchester.jpg|Canal StreetImage:DeansgateLocks.jpg|Deansgate Locks*
St Ann's Church, Manchester*
Stockport air disaster (1967)
*
Royal Manchester Children's Hospital*
List of bands from Manchester*
List of films set in Manchester*
List of television shows set in Manchester*
Manchester air disaster (1985)
*
Manchester City Centre*
Manchester UniversityPrint
*Manchester architecture
*
Manchester. Clare Hartwell. Pevsner Architectural Guides ISBN 0300096666
*
Manchester: A guide to recent architecture. David Hands and Sarah Parker. Ellipsis. ISBN 1899858776
*
Manchester â€" an Architectural History John Parkinson Bailey. Manchester University Press. ISBN 0719056063
*General
*
The City Life Guide to Manchester: 6th edition. ISBN 0954446070
*
The Mancunian Way Published by Clinamen Press ISBN 1903083818
*
Manchester â€" a Celebration.
Brian Redhead. André Deutsch Limited, London. ISBN 0233988165
*
Victorian Manchester & Salford. Published in 1988 by Ryburn Publishing Limited. ISBN 1853310069
*Manchester culture
*
Morrissey's Manchester: The Essential Smiths Tour Phil Gatenby ISBN 1901746283
*
Manchester, England. The story of the pop cult city. Dave Haslam ISBN 1841151467
*
And God Created Manchester. Sarah Champion. Wordsmith. ISBN 1873205015
*
The Hacienda Must be Built. Edited by Jon Savage. International Music Publications ISBN 0863598579
*
Shake, Rattle and Rain â€" Popular Music in Manchester 1955-1995. CP Lee ISBN 1843820498
*
Like The Night â€" Bob Dylan and the road to the Manchester Free Trade Hall.
CP Lee ISBN 1900924331
Online
*
Market & Research Opinion International (MORI) official website*
National Statistics Online
'Manchester's Official Tourist Board' | work=MORI | url=http://www.visitmanchester.com|
*
Manchester City Council*
Visit Manchester â€" Official tourist board for Greater Manchester
*
BBC Manchester â€" The BBCs pages for Manchester
*
Manchester City Guide - Information about Bars, Pubs, Clubs, Hotels and Restaurants
*
AGMA â€" The Association of Greater Manchester Authorities
*
Urbis â€" Manchester's museum of city life
*
Manchester blogs â€" An aggregation of Manchester blogs
*
FLICKR Group â€" An eclectic mix of Manchester photos
*
Piccadillywilson â€" One resident's photographic record of living in Manchester
*
Manchester Nightclubs A guide to nightlife within Manchester