Great Northern Warehouse

The Great Northern Warehouse
General information
LocationManchester, England
Address235 Deansgate, Manchester, M3 4EN
Coordinates53°28′38″N 2°14′57″W / 53.47722°N 2.24917°W / 53.47722; -2.24917
Current tenantsOdeon Cinema, NCP Manchester Ltd, The Gym, Lane7 Manchester, Manchester235 casino
Construction started1885
Completed1899
Renovated1998
Design and construction
Architect(s)A. Ross
Structural engineerW. T. Foxlee
Designations
Listed Building – Grade II*
Official nameDeansgate Goods Station and attached carriage ramp
Designated3 May 1979
Reference no.1268529
Website
www.thegreatnorthern.com

The Great Northern Warehouse is the former railway goods warehouse of the Great Northern Railway in Manchester city centre, England, which was refurbished into a leisure complex in 1999. The building is at the junction of Deansgate and Peter Street. It was granted Grade II* listed building status in 1974.[1]

The warehouse was built to be fireproof with a steel frame on a rectangular plan, 267 ft (81 m) long by 217 ft (66 m) wide and five storeys high, with 27 windows on the east and west sides and 17 windows on the north and south ends. All four sides have friezes lettered in white brick reading "Great Northern Railway Company's Goods Warehouse".[1] It was built above the Manchester and Salford Junction Canal, and a dock was constructed beneath to allow goods to be transferred to and from canal barges via shafts and a complex system of haulage using hydraulic power.[2]

The building could hold a total of 150 goods wagons across two of its levels, with capacity for a further 500 in its sidings. Its construction effectively wiped out the district of Alport Town, which had included 300 houses, and "Over 800 men were employed on the site. 25 million bricks, 50,000 tons of concrete, 12,000 tons of mild steel and 65 miles of rivets were used in its construction".[3]

According to Historic England, the warehouse is a "unique survival of a three-way railway goods exchange station, serving the railway, canal and road networks of the Manchester region."[1]

As of February 2023, the development includes an Odeon Cinema, casino, restaurants, bars, bowling alley, gym, and a multi-storey car park.

  1. ^ a b c Cite error: The named reference NHLE was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  2. ^ Cite error: The named reference Hartwell210 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  3. ^ Parkinson-Bailey, John J. (2000). Manchester: An Architectural History. Manchester University Press. p. 55. ISBN 978-0-71905-606-2.