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Salford Shopping City looking onto Hankinson Way, May 2005.

Salford Shopping City (also known as Salford Precinct or Salford Shopping Centre) is a Shopping Centre located in Pendleton, 3.2km (2 miles) from Manchester City Centre[1]

Built in 1972, Salford Shopping City has been the subject of numerous redevelopment projects undertaken by Salford City Council. The centre currently boasts 81 indoor shopping units and an indoor market complex which sells a wide range of goods. Outside the indoor structure is a KFC, Post Office and Aldi store, which is due to open in January 2014.

Opposite the main site stands a large Tescos store which opened in November 2012[2] as part of a larger regeneration plan of the Pendleton area.

History

Im 1952 the Ellor Street development plan was announced and was to be chaired by councilor Albert Jones. The plan proposed the demolition of 6,000 Terranced houses over a 300 acre site in the Hanky Park (Hankinson Street) and Ellor Street areas of Pendleton[3]. The area was to be cleared to make way for a new shopping centre, this centre was designed to relieve 147 shops along the A6 road affected by road improvements and replace 120 corner shops set to be demolished under the development plan[4].

In 1962 the project, which was to cost £5.25 million[5] (£95 million in today's money) began.

The original proposal was to build a site which consisted of 260 shops, a market, spaces for 2000 cars, plus a hotel, offices and flats. This promted a local newspaper to run the story with the headline "it will be the finest in Europe".

Construction of the shopping centre and surrounding areas continued and on May 21,1970, the new Salford Market officially opened. From 1971 on wards new shops inside the precinct itself began to open, the first of these being Tescos.

However due to a lack of funds and a political scandal which saw chairman Albert Jones jailed for 8 months[6] construction of Salford Precinct was halted. The site had only 95 shop units compared to the proposed 260, the hotel and 2 storey car park were never built.

In 1991 the building was refurbished at a cost of £4 Million, this included the installation of roofs across various walkways, making large swathes of the centre undercover. The shopping centre which at the time was known as "Salford Precinct" was re-named "Salford Shopping City"

On the 9th August 1994 the Manchester Evening News reported that Salford City Council was planning on selling off Salford Shopping City to raise money for local housing repairs[7], these plans split the ruling Labour Party council, one councillor telling the press that it would be like "selling off the family silver".

In 2000 Salford Shopping City was eventually sold to a private company for £10 million in an effort to cut Council deficit. It was then later sold in March 2010 to Salford Estates for £40 million, the company stated that it wanted to invest in the precinct and link it to the new food superstore[8].

Salford Riots 2011

Damage to Cash Converters after the Salford riots, 10 August 2011.

On the 9th of August 2011 a minority of people from Salford and its surrounding Manchester areas attacked several retail outlets at Salford Shopping City[9], as part of the larger scale English Riots experienced in England that summer.

Although shops on the inside of the centre remained largely untouched, outlets on Hankinson way and Pendleton way were heavily damaged, one of the worst affected was Timpsons and Cash Converters[10], these outlets were both looted and set ablaze by rioters. Images of rioters breaking into several outlets on Hankinson way including The Money Shop and Bargain Booze were broadcast-ed on both local and national news programs that day.

Several reasons have been put forward for the events that took place at Salford Shopping City that day, they include poor relations with local authority and poor living conditions in the surrounding areas including Clarendon which at the time of the incident had the highest child poverty rates in Salford at 75%[11]. However Prime minister David Cameron dismissed these claims, stating that the rioters were merely "Opportunistic Thugs"[12] in a statement to the House of Commons.

Tesco Controversy

In October 2010 Salford City Council gave the go ahead for a new £45 million Tescos superstore to be built on Pendleton way opposite the site of Salford Shopping City. The plan involved the demolition of St James's primary school which had stood on the site since the early 1900's, the demolition of Emmanuel Church which was to be later rebuilt on Langworthy road and the permanent closure of Pendleton Way[13].

The proposal met with fierce opposition from both Salford Estates (Owners of Salford Shopping City) who had purchased the site for £40 million in March of 2010[14] and Local residents. Gareth Edmunds of Salford Estates claimed that "traders can't compete with a Tesco of that size" and it would "destroy Salford Shopping City"[15]. On October 21st 2010 Salford Estates launched judicial review proceedings against the Salford City Council over the sale of the land to Tesco[16] and presented them with a petition with over 8,000 signatures from local traders and residents rejecting the proposal[17].

Despite this construction commenced in early 2012, the store was designed by Smith Smalley Architects[18] and constructed by Patton Construction[19]. The store opened on the 15th November 2013[20]. Tesco claimed the 24-hour store would create over 600 new jobs with at least half of them going to locally unemployed people.

Future Development

Salford Estates have promised to continue to develop the site. In late 2012 the original market which had stood since 1970 was removed and replaced with 3 units. One of the units is a 15,900 sq ft supermarket to be occupied by Aldi which is set to open in January 2014 and will create over 80 Jobs[21]. Two further 5,000 sq ft non-food units have not yet been pre-let[22].

In November 2013 a 2,661 sq ft KFC opened, creating 40 new jobs.

Development will continue through 2014 and beyond, this will include over 90,000 sq ft of additional retail space split into two extensions of 13 double height shop units. Development will take place primarily on the west side of the complex including the removal of the current west side car park. As well as there will be a new modern Market Hall and Taxi Rank constructed[23].




  1. ^ http://www.salford.gov.uk/d/3._appendix_b_spg_for_salford_shopping_city2.pdf
  2. ^ http://www.salfordonline.com/localnews.php?func=viewdetails&vdetails=37068
  3. ^ https://www.facebook.com/SalfordShoppingCentre/info
  4. ^ http://www.salford.gov.uk/d/Ellor_Street_Redevelopment_1963_pt1.pdf
  5. ^ http://www.salfordstar.com/article.asp?id=716
  6. ^ http://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/news/local-news/albert-did-it-his-way-in-life-1009524
  7. ^ http://www.lgcplus.com/salford-agonise-over-shopping-centre-sale/1611976.article
  8. ^ http://www.salfordstar.com/article.asp?id=725
  9. ^ The Pendleton Riot, Bob Jeffery and Will Jackson, 2012
  10. ^ http://www.theguardian.com/uk/2011/aug/10/salford-traders-riots-manchester-looting
  11. ^ http://www.salfordstar.com/article.asp?id=1060
  12. ^ http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-14492789
  13. ^ http://www.salfordstar.com/article.asp?id=1321
  14. ^ http://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/business/business-news/40m-sale-agreed-for-salford-shopping-885006
  15. ^ http://www.salfordstar.com/article.asp?id=717
  16. ^ http://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/news/local-news/legal-bid-to-halt-tesco-store-900568
  17. ^ http://www.cnplus.co.uk/news/sectors/retail/tesco-wins-pendleton-store-fight/8607348.article
  18. ^ http://www.building.co.uk/patton-construction-wins-%C2%A345m-salford-tesco-superstore/5026744.article
  19. ^ http://www.cnplus.co.uk/patton-wins-45m-salford-tesco/8621453.article
  20. ^ http://salfordonline.com/localnews.php?func=viewdetails&vdetails=39161
  21. ^ http://www.shopping-centre.co.uk/news/archivestory.php/aid/6526/Salford_shopping_centre_signs_Aldi_and_KFC_.html
  22. ^ http://www.placenorthwest.co.uk/news/archive/13664-aldi-supermarket-for-salford-shopping-city.html
  23. ^ http://pendletonway.co.uk/the-development/


External Links

Official Website