place

Crowngate Shopping Centre

Buildings and structures in Worcester, EnglandShopping centres in WorcestershireShopping malls established in 1992Use British English from June 2014Vague or ambiguous time from April 2021
Primary Logo
Primary Logo

Crowngate Worcester is a shopping centre in Worcester, England, built in part on the historic site of the Worcester Blackfriars monastery, and replacing the former Blackfriars shopping centre.It contains forty-nine stores, with a range of both large and smaller units, including House of Fraser and Primark. There are three restaurants in the recently refurbished Friary Walk; Wildwood Kitchen, Bills restaurant and Anatolian Greek Palace. Other facilities include a 780 space, multi-story car park, Worcester's bus station and the Huntingdon Hall Theatre. In October 2009 the centre underwent a £5 million refurbishment. In 2017, plans for a new look for Crowngate were published., which were completed in 2019, and gave the existing building a brand new frontage.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Crowngate Shopping Centre (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Crowngate Shopping Centre
Deansway, Worcester, England

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Crowngate Shopping CentreContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 52.19198 ° E -2.22267 °
placeShow on map

Address

House of Fraser

Deansway
WR1 2LB Worcester, England
England, United Kingdom
mapOpen on Google Maps

Primary Logo
Primary Logo
Share experience

Nearby Places

Worcester Boer War Memorial
Worcester Boer War Memorial

The Worcester Boer War Memorial in Worcester, England, was unveiled near Worcester Cathedral in 1908. The war memorial commemorates casualties of the Second Boer War from the county of Worcestershire. It was designated a Grade II* listed building in 1999. The memorial comprises a bronze sculptural group mounted on an octagonal Portland stone plinth and base, standing on three steps. The front of the plinth bears the inscription: 'IN GRATEFUL / MEMORY OF / THE MEN OF / WORCESTER-/ SHIRE WHO IN / SOUTH AFRICA / GAVE THEIR / LIVES FOR THEIR / COUNTRY. / A.D.1899-1902." A further inscription on the stone base quotes from Ecclesiasticus: "Their bodies are buried in peace; / but their name liveth for evermore. Ecclus XLIV 14" The bronze sculpture by William Robert Colton depicts a soldier of the Worcestershire Regiment, bare-headed and bare-armed, with a bandolier of bullets, kneeling with a bayonet affixed to his rifle held in a high "ready" position, in front of a standing winged female figure (various in various sources as an angel, or a Winged Victory, or a personification of "Immortality") with her left hand gripping a sheathed sword girt with a laurel wreath and the right holding an olive branch (or possibly a palm branch) over the head of the soldier. The memorial was unveiled on 23 September 1908 by General Sir Neville Lyttelton, on a site to the north of Worcester Cathedral. It stands close to the passing A44.