Location | Liverpool, England |
---|---|
Coordinates | 53°24′25″N2°58′52″W / 53.407°N 2.981°W |
Address | St George's Place, Liverpool L1 1LY |
Opening date | 1969[1] |
Management | Neil Ashcroft |
Owner | AnaCap (Owner) RivingtonHark (Asset Management) |
Architect | James A. Roberts [2] |
No. of stores and services | 105 |
Total retail floor area | 360,002 sq ft (33,445.3 m2) [3] |
No. of floors | 4 |
Parking | 621 [3] |
Public transit access | Liverpool Lime Street |
Website | stjohns-shopping |
St Johns Liverpool is the largest covered shopping centre in the city of Liverpool, located in the heart of the city since 1969 and home to more than 100 retailers. The centre is also home to a contemporary St John's Market which has a history dating back to the original 1822 St. John's Market, although the current market was opened to the public by Queen Elizabeth II in April 1971. [4]
All businesses located in St Johns Liverpool are members of City Central, a Business Improvement District (BID) representing approximately 630 businesses in the retail and leisure heart of Liverpool city centre. [5]
One of the first fully enclosed, roofed market halls, St. John's Market opened to the public in 1822. It was the largest in the nineteenth century. It was designed by John Foster, Junior with "136 stone-trimmed classical arched window bays, supported by 116 interior cast-iron pillars". [6] In 1964 it was demolished.
St Johns Liverpool, which was designed by architect James A. (Jim) Roberts, opened in 1969.
A subway with direct access to Lime Street station was open before being boarded up some years later. [7] There were two major fires in the centre, on 26 September 1977 and 17/18 December 1979. [8]
Considerations were made by Liverpool City Council in relation to a possible relocation of the shopping market as part of a larger redevelopment proposal for the centre. Land Securities, the then owner of the shopping centre, was aiming to start the refurbishment in early 2009 with the market moving in 2010 if the proposals went ahead. [1] [9]
In March 2013, St Johns Liverpool was acquired by InfraRed Capital Partners for £76.5 million [10] and has since been acquired by Anacap Financial Partners which purchased the asset in September 2021. [11]
Work started in July 2013 to completely refurbish and renovate the food court. The £1.6 million refurbishment, which was carried out by Graham Interior Fitout, [12] dramatically modernised the lower-ground area as well as the atria around the escalators and the first floor balustrading. Work took until November 2013 to complete. [13]
In June 2016, St Johns Market closed for a £2 million refurbishment. Following the completion of the refurbishment, the market is now spread over two floors around a central atrium with a number of enhancements, such as the installation of WiFi and new public toilets. [14] The refurbishment has also seen an increase in the number of stalls in the market from 90 to approximately 120. [15] The market reopened after the completion of the refurbishment on 25 November 2016. [16] In March 2024, the market was closed by the council due to over £1.7m of unpaid rent and service charges. [17]
St Johns Beacon, now known as the Radio City Tower, is located on separate foundations from the shopping centre and constructed with the centre as a ventilation shaft for the markets incinerator. Between 1971 and 1983 the beacon housed a revolving restaurant which Queen Elizabeth II opened in 1971. In 2000, it became the Radio City Tower and now houses the studios and offices for Radio City and Greatest Hits Radio Liverpool & The North West.
Retail tenants at St Johns include Aldi, Argos, Home Bargains, Iceland, Matalan, Sainsbury's and Wilko.
Food and drink outlets at St Johns include KFC, McDonald's and Subway. There is also a branch of Wetherspoons, The Fall Well, which was previously a pet shop.
St Johns is also home to one of Liverpool's largest group of independent retailers, ranging from baby clothing to beauty outlets. Such as long-standing and extremely popular stores such as Storm and Frocks to newer stores like Fifty1.
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Kirkby is a town in the Metropolitan Borough of Knowsley, Merseyside, England. The town, historically in Lancashire, has a size of 4,070 acres (16.5 km2) is 5 miles (8 km) north of Huyton and 6 miles (10 km) north-east of Liverpool. The population in 2016 was 41,495 making it the largest in Knowsley and the 9th biggest settlement in Merseyside.
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Liverpool Lime Street is a terminus railway station and the main station serving the city centre of Liverpool. Opened in August 1836, it is the oldest still-operating grand terminus mainline station in the world. A branch of the West Coast Main Line from London Euston terminates at the station, as does the original Liverpool and Manchester Railway. Journeys from Lime Street cover a wide range of destinations across England, Scotland and Wales.
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St Johns Beacon is a radio and observation tower in Liverpool, England. Designed by James A. Roberts Associates, it was built in 1969 and opened by Queen Elizabeth II.
Liverpool Central railway station in Liverpool, England, forms a central hub of the Merseyrail network, being on both the Northern Line and the Wirral Line. The station is located underground on two levels, below the site of a former mainline terminus. It is the busiest station in Liverpool, though considerably smaller than Lime Street station, the mainline terminus, and the busiest station to operate solely on the Merseyrail network. The station is the busiest underground station outside London serving 40,000 people daily. The station in passengers per platform is the busiest underground railway station in the United Kingdom at 5,217,547 per platform per annum and laying third in all stations, underground or overground.
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Clayton Square Shopping Centre is an inner-city shopping centre located in Liverpool, England. It is in close proximity to Liverpool Lime Street and Liverpool Central railway stations. It is the city's fourth largest shopping centre behind Liverpool One, St. John's Shopping Centre and Metquarter. Clayton Square sees tough competition from the likes of Liverpool One, St.Johns, Metquarter, Church Street, Lord Street and Bold Street.
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St. John's Market was a municipal retail market hall in Liverpool, England, housed in a purpose-designed building erected between 1820 and 1822 to a design by John Foster, Junior. It quickly came to be seen as a model for market halls erected elsewhere in the UK in the 19th century. The north and south facades of the building were altered in 1881 and 1891; it was demolished in 1964, making way for the 1969 St Johns Shopping Centre, the western half of which occupies the hall's site.