Fruit Exchange | |
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General information | |
Type | Former railway depot and fruit exchange |
Architectural style | Flemish Renaissance |
Location | 10-18 Victoria Street, Liverpool, England, United Kingdom |
Coordinates | 53°24′24″N2°59′25″W / 53.4068°N 2.9902°W |
Completed | c.1888 |
Designations | |
Listed Building – Grade II | |
Official name | Fruit Exchange |
Designated | 8 April 2008 |
Reference no. | 1392539 |
References | |
[1] |
The Fruit Exchange Building is Grade II listed building on Victoria Street in Liverpool, England.
Constructed around 1888, the building was originally designed as a railway depot for London & North Western Railway . [2] From the 1860s, Victoria Street was the location of many offices and commercial buildings that meant it played a key part during the growth of Liverpool. [3] During the later part 19th century, the street became home to fruit and produce dealers and their warehouses, aided by its proximity to the docks and Liverpool Exchange railway station. [4]
The building was converted from a railway depot into a fruit exchange in 1923. It was situated next to the Produce Exchange Buildings, which was also a converted railway depot. [5] The building and was still in use as a fruit exchange in the late 1960s. [6] The office and exchange hall parts of the building have lain empty for many years and have been part of the Liverpool Echo 'Stop the rot' campaign. [7]
The warehouse part of the building that backs onto Mathew Street originally held Eric's Club and later the Rubber Sole bar. [8] During its four-year lifespan, Eric's hosted local bands such as Dead or Alive, Echo & the Bunnymen and Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark as well as international acts like U2, Talking Heads and The Ramones.
Plans to convert the front part of the building into an 85-bedroom hotel were approved by Liverpool City Council in 2020. [9]
The building is split into two halves; the front block having been offices and the back block containing the exchange halls and offices. [1] The ground floors and warehouses have been converted into a pub / bar, but the main exchange hall remains relatively untouched.
Castlefield is an inner-city conservation area in Manchester, North West England. The conservation area which bears its name is bounded by the River Irwell, Quay Street, Deansgate and Chester Road. It was the site of the Roman era fort of Mamucium or Mancunium which gave its name to Manchester. It was the terminus of the Bridgewater Canal, the world's first industrial canal, built in 1764; the oldest canal warehouse opened in 1779. The world's first passenger railway terminated here in 1830, at Liverpool Road railway station and the first railway warehouse opened here in 1831.
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Manchester Central railway station was a railway station in Manchester city centre, England. One of Manchester's main railway terminals between 1880 and 1969, the building was converted into an exhibition and conference centre which was opened in 1986, originally known as G-MEX, but now named Manchester Central. The structure is a Grade II* listed building.
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Manchester Oldham Road station opened in 1839 as the terminus station of the Manchester and Leeds Railway (M&LR) in Collyhurst, Manchester. When the M&LR opened Manchester Victoria in 1844 as its new Manchester passenger station Oldham Road was converted to a goods station which it remained until its closure in 1968.
The architecture of Liverpool is rooted in the city's development into a major port of the British Empire. It encompasses a variety of architectural styles of the past 300 years, while next to nothing remains of its medieval structures which would have dated back as far as the 13th century. Erected 1716–18, Bluecoat Chambers is supposed to be the oldest surviving building in central Liverpool.
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Liverpool city centre is the commercial, cultural, financial and historical centre of Liverpool and the Liverpool City Region, England. Different definitions of the city centre exist for urban planning and local government, however, the border of Liverpool city centre is broadly marked by the inner city districts of Vauxhall, Everton, Edge Hill, Kensington and Toxteth.
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The Produce Exchange Buildings is Grade II listed building on Victoria Street in Liverpool, England.