Darwin Shopping Centre
The Darwin Shopping Centre is the largest of the three main shopping centres in Shrewsbury, Shropshire, England, comprising approximately 17 per cent of the town centre's retail offer by leasable area.[1]
Location | Shrewsbury, England |
---|---|
Coordinates | 52.7102°N 2.7523°W |
Owner | UK Commercial Property Trust (managed by Ignis Asset Management) & Shearer Property Group |
No. of stores and services | 53[1] |
No. of anchor tenants | 2 (Marks & Spencer & Primark) |
Total retail floor area | 189,316 sq ft (17,588.0 m2) |
No. of floors | 4 |
Parking | 920 spaces[2] |
Website | shrewsbury-shopping |
It was built by John Laing Developments in 1989 and refurbished in 2002.[3] It is due to undergo further refurbishment in a plan being devised by Chapman Taylor Architects[4] as part of the New Riverside redevelopment.
Ownership
The mall has shared a turbulent recent history with the Pride Hill and Riverside centres which came under common ownership in 2003 under Dunedin Property.[5] Protego's UK Actively Managed Shopping Centre Fund acquired the centres in 2006, serviced by a loan provided by Lehman Brothers. Defaulting on £82m of that loan,[6] the centres entered receivership with the collapse of Lehman.
UK Commercial Property Trust (managed by Ignis Asset Management) took control of the three centres in March 2010 and is under management by Ignis and Shearer Property Group.[7] The Darwin centre has been attributed a nominal value of £38.6m as part of the £63.6m purchase.[8]
Retailers
Marks & Spencer anchors the centre and is the largest unit by some way, featuring two retail floors and a mezzanine level. The former Woolworths was reconfigured into H&M and Home Bargains stores, with the 22,000 sq ft (2,000 m2) H&M's lower and upper levels occupying the former Woolworths upper and staff-only levels respectively, and the Home Bargains occupying the former Woolworths lower level.[9]
Principal tenants also include JD Sports, Poundland (now in the former Mothercare unit; see below) and River Island, Topshop and W H Smith, the first two of which are notable for being branches of those fashion chains which are in the same units they have occupied since the early 1990s when the centre was very new, albeit both having each had a full refit in the mid 2000s and a further partial refit in the 2010s to keep them up to date.
A Primark occupies a 30,300 sq ft unit created by amalgamating nine units on the upper and middle levels of the centre, including the former JJB Sports, Currys.digital (pre-Currys PC World rebrand of Dixons) and Dorothy Perkins stores "upstairs", and the former Poundland unit, food/drink kiosk and the upper level of the former T.K. Maxx store "downstairs", T.K. Maxx having moved to Meole Brace retail park.[10]
Location
The centre is accessed directly from the pedestrianised shopping area in Shrewsbury town centre on Pride Hill. Further access can be gained via the dual frontages into the centre offered by W H Smith, Marks & Spencer and H&M. It is joined to the Riverside Mall and the Pride Hill Shopping Centre via a pedestrian walkway and Raven Meadows.
The centre is connected by a pedestrian link directly to council-owned multi-storey parking at 'Raven Meadows' and to the town bus station, which is in turn a short walk to Shrewsbury railway station.
The centre is an unusual example of a vertical mall. Similar to the Pride Hill Shopping Centre, it is built on the side of a steep hill and around the former outer walls of the nearby medieval castle.[11] This geography and archaeology prevented the centres from being built as one contiguous arcade. Consequently, these centres together occupy seven floors split over two horizontal locations, connected with escalators, lifts and walkway bridges.[12]
Future
There has long been an ambition to physically link the Darwin and Pride Hill shopping centres through the development of vacant land between the sites.[13] Referred to as the 'Gap site', a retail and leisure link development proposed by Morris Property, owners of the land, was granted full planning permission in 2006 prior to being sold to new owners.[14] The onset of economic crisis ensured the scheme was put on hold. Dunedin, promoters of the scheme in 2005, put four branding proposals to the public vote in a high-profile marketing push for the renaming of the present centres following the new development's completion. The reconfigured centre would have been branded 'Castle Gate'.[15]
Chapman Taylor Architects were hired by Shearer Property in October 2010 to devise plans for refurbishment as part of a wider renewal and redevelopment of the estate.[4]
See also
- Telford Shopping Centre, a larger shopping centre in nearby Telford
References
- Jones Lang LaSalle appointed managing agent for The Charles Darwin, Pride Hill and Riverside Shopping Centres in Shrewsbury. Jones Lang Lasalle. Joneslanglasalle.co.uk (25 August 2010).
- http://www.shopproperty.co.uk/DisplayShoppingCentre.aspx?ShoppingCentrecode=38692482568QISW
- "fundnets.net" (PDF). fundnets.net. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 August 2011. Retrieved 22 July 2017.
- Shearer shapes Shrewsbury | News - print. Property Week (29 October 2010).
- http://www.propertyweek.com/news/isis-sells-£25m-shrewsbury-shopping-centre/3029609.article%5B%5D
- Number one for news, opinion, sport & celebrity gossip. Birmingham Post.
- Chesters, Laura. (31 March 2010) Sale of Shrewsbury shopping centre trio completes | Online. Property Week.
- "Aberdeen Standard Investments" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 July 2011. Retrieved 16 May 2011.
- (PDF) https://web.archive.org/web/20111002195318/http://www.shrewsbury-shopping.co.uk/assets/pdf/shrewsbury-leasing.pdf. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 October 2011. Retrieved 16 May 2011. Missing or empty
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(help) - "UK Commercial Property Trust to Revamp Centre After Luring Primark". Retrieved 20 June 2016.
- Discovering Shropshire's History: Shrewsbury Town Walls. Discovershropshire.org.uk.
- Shrewsbury Shopping Centres store guide Archived 2 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine
- Thomas, Helen. (4 June 2004) Shrewsbury's centre stage | Markets - print. Property Week.
- Malls bid gets back on track « Shropshire Star Archived 28 July 2012 at the Wayback Machine. Shropshirestar.com (1 November 2006).