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Swindon Designer Outlet is a covered designer outlet in Swindon, England. The outlet occupies most of the restored Great Western railway works and is owned by McArthurGlen. Built by Tarmac Construction and opened in March 1997, [1] [2] it is a few miles from junction 16 of the M4 motorway. [2] In the eating area, a number of steam locomotives ...
Swindon Designer Outlet, Swindon; Tudor Arcade, Dorchester; Union Square, Torquay (formerly Haldon Centre) Victoria Square, Paignton; Weaver's Walk, Bradford-on-Avon; West Swindon Shopping Centre, Swindon; The Westway Shopping Centre, Frome; Wharfside Shopping Centre, Penzance; Yate Shopping Centre, Yate
Bicester Village; C. Cheshire Oaks Designer Outlet; Clarks Village; D. ... Swindon Designer Outlet This page was last edited on 8 April 2017, at 09:44 (UTC). Text ...
Outlet Location Retail area Shops Opened Designer Outlet Berlin Elstal, Germany: 21,000 m 2 (255,960 sq ft) 110 June 2009, 2nd phase September 2010 Castel Romano Designer Outlet Castel Romano, Italy: 25,000 m 2 (269,100 sq ft) 117 October 2003, 2nd phase November 2006 McArthurGlen Designer Outlet Neumünster Neumünster, Germany: 20,000 m 2: 140
Cheshire Oaks Designer Outlet is an outlet centre in Ellesmere Port, Cheshire, England. Located off Junction 10 of the M53 , it is the largest outlet centre in the United Kingdom, with 145 stores and the first designer outlet village in Europe, [ 1 ] when it opened in March 1995. [ 2 ]
The McArthurGlen Ashford Designer Outlet was designed by the Richard Rogers Partnership and engineers Buro Happold, and opened in March 2000. There are over 120 designer brands located at the shopping outlet. On 15 November 2013, the Ashford Designer Outlet confirmed plans to almost double in size. [1]
STEAM – Museum of the Great Western Railway, also known as Swindon Steam Railway Museum, is housed in part of the former railway works in Swindon, England – Wiltshire's 'railway town'. The 6,500-square-metre (70,000 sq ft) museum opened in 2000.
A well-circulated myth states that Brunel and Gooch were surveying a vale north of Swindon Hill and Brunel either threw a stone or dropped a sandwich and declared that spot to be the centre of the works. [2] [3] However, Swindon's midway point between GWR terminals and the topography of land near the town were more likely factors. [4] [5]