Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Major thoroughfare into Manchester from southern suburbs such as Cheadle and Burnage: Parrs Wood Entertainment Centre Market Street: Before 1417 [6] Pedestrian zone end to end; High Street tram stop; Royal Exchange: Mosley Street: Late 18th century [7] A street only for Metrolink trams and previously buses which joined the street at Lower ...
Media in category "Streets in Manchester" This category contains only the following file. Withington Milestone2 cropped.jpg 2,007 × 1,891; 939 KB
Streets in Manchester (1 C, 22 P, 1 F) Pages in category "Roads in Greater Manchester" The following 40 pages are in this category, out of 40 total.
Toggle Roads and streets subsection. 7.1 Motorways. 7.2 Notable roads. 8 Parks, ... This is a partial list of places in Greater Manchester, in North West England.
The streets in the neighbourhood were laid in the 1780s and by the early 19th century Mosley Street was the centre of the fashionable residential part of town with institutions such as the Portico Library and the Royal Manchester Institution. The street was named after Nicholas Mosley who in 1596 bought the manor of Manchester for £3,500. [3]
Market Street in Manchester, once known as Market Stead Lane, lies along the former route of the A6 road which runs from Luton in Bedfordshire, to Carlisle in Cumbria.The A6 arrives at Manchester city centre as London Road and formerly went north-west along Piccadilly, Market Street, St. Mary's Gate and Blackfriars Street and then over the River Irwell to Blackfriars Street, Salford.
Oldham Street is in Manchester city centre and forms part of the city's historic Northern Quarter district. The Northern Quarter is dominated by buildings that were built before World War II. [1] The street runs from Piccadilly to Great Ancoats Street on the edge of Ancoats, beyond which it continues northwards as Oldham Road, the A62.
St John Street is a street in central Manchester, England.It consists mainly of late Georgian and Regency era terraced houses. Laid out between 1770 and 1830, the street runs roughly east–west between Deansgate and Byrom Street, terminating in an urban park, formerly the site of St John's Church, at its eastern end.