It was in the Corn Exchange beside Exchange Square, and I always thought it was an innovative way to fill a space.
Added to that I rather enjoyed sitting in there sipping an espresso and waiting for the shopping expedition to finish.
But it has gone since then the space around it was transformed from a retail centre to a series of themed restaurants from Italian, to Thai, and many more.
The Corn Exchange is a listed grade II building and was originally the Corn and Produce Exchange built in 1897 and opened in 1903.
Its role as an important centre for business suffered during the 1920 and 30s and and by the time I arrived in Manchester in 1969 its role as a trading floor were over.
But I remember it as a place full of independent traders ranging from second records and comics to clothes and jewellery.
You could spend hours wandering the stalls on the trading floor and in the surrounding rooms, but that IRA bomb did for all this.
The building was severely damaged and many of the traders relocated to what has become the Northern Quarter, and the building was redeveloped as the Triangle specialising in swish retailing, but it never seemed as busy in later years, and despite a re branding in 2012 seemed to miss a trick.
And then it closed reopening as an interesting place to eat.
Location; Manchester
Pictures; interior of the Triangle, July 2013
*Corn Exchange, Manchester, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corn_Exchange,_Manchester
I loved the bohemian hippy market in the 80s and 90s. The fortune teller always had a queue outside the kiosk! Shame that explosion stopped such a popular and unique attraction.
ReplyDeleteThanks PJ, I rather think some of the plans for the "new Manchester" were beginning to germinate before the bomb.
ReplyDeleteUnearthed images of The Corn Exchange:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/news/nostalgia/gallery/unearthed-images-take-you-back-23026050
An old pal Dennis had a jewellery and (quirky) antiques stall in the Exchange one of the cabin like sheds in the main floor area . The bombing also wrecked his business and he was unable to recover his stock for quite a time as the building was considered unsafe.
ReplyDelete