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Didsbury Village tram stop

DidsburyManchester South District LinePages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway stations in Great Britain opened in 2013Tram stops in Manchester
Tram stops on the East Didsbury to Rochdale lineUse British English from February 2018
Didsbury Village tram stop (geograph 6334157)
Didsbury Village tram stop (geograph 6334157)

Didsbury Village is a tram stop on the South Manchester Line on the light-rail Metrolink network in Greater Manchester, England. It serves the South Manchester suburb of Didsbury.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Didsbury Village tram stop (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Didsbury Village tram stop
Olive Shapley Avenue, Manchester Didsbury

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Didsbury Village tram stopContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.41672 ° E -2.22853 °
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Address

Didsbury Village

Olive Shapley Avenue
M20 6QX Manchester, Didsbury
England, United Kingdom
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Didsbury Village tram stop (geograph 6334157)
Didsbury Village tram stop (geograph 6334157)
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Nearby Places

Capitol Theatre, Manchester
Capitol Theatre, Manchester

The Capitol Theatre was a cinema in Didsbury, Manchester later used as television studios by ITV contractor ABC Weekend TV from 1956 to 1968. The building opened as a cinema in 1931, but was badly damaged by fire in April 1932 and was closed for repairs until August 1933. The cinema was equipped for the production of live shows, and was used for occasional pantomimes and amateur theatrical performances. In 1956 it was converted into television studios for ABC Weekend TV. Programmes such as Opportunity Knocks and Police Surgeon were made in the studios. Following the merger of Associated Rediffusion and ABC to create Thames Television (on air from July 1968) the studios were leased to Yorkshire Television in 1967 for recording pre-launch programming whilst their own studios were being constructed and in 1970 was sold to Manchester Polytechnic and was the base for their theatre and television school from 1971. Renamed the Horniman Theatre, it staged performances by students of the college, including early performances by Julie Walters, Bernard Hill, and David Threlfall.The theatre reverted to its original name in 1987, and the polytechnic was granted university status as "Manchester Metropolitan University" on 15 September 1992 under the provisions of the Further and Higher Education Act 1992. As part of the university restructuring in 1997, the building was sold to a development company and demolished to make way for blocks of flats. The School of Theatre moved its faculty and performance space to the All Saints campus on Oxford Road, where there is now a new Capitol Theatre, a 140-seat studio space.