Showing posts with label G-Mex. Show all posts
Showing posts with label G-Mex. Show all posts

Monday, 12 September 2022

So what would you have done with the old Central Station in the heart of Manchester?

Now you will have to be a certain age to remember this image of the old Central Station before it was transformed into G-Mex.

And even older if you used it as a car park and of course older still if you caught a train from one of its nine platforms.

It opened in 1880 and closed to passengers in 1969.

I missed it by a couple of months and only discovered it in the late 1970s when I wandered in and photographed the interior.

Sadly the pictures have long since been lost, so I was very pleased when my friend Ann sent this one taken by her husband sometime around 1978.

Like other disused railway stations it suffered from dereliction, the indignity of being used as a car park and was damaged by fire.

But in 1982 it was bought by the Greater Manchester Council and work began to convert it into an exhibition centre.

This was a bold and imaginative plan and by one of those odd coincidences I got to see the work in progress sometime in 1985 or ’86, in the company of John Smith the leader of the Labour Party and Keith Bradley who went on to become the first Labour MP for Manchester Withington.

And just six years after G-Mex was opened part of the railway track that once ran into Central was adapted to take the Metro link which today is being extended to accommodate the Second City Crossing.

Like many who use the line I often gaze across at that great arched structure of iron and glass and reflect on just what was saved and how it could all have been so different when Howard photographed the building.

Picture; Central Station, 1978, from the collection of Howard Love