place

Quaintways

Cheshire building and structure stubsMusic venue stubsMusic venues in CheshireNightclubs in England
The Rows Chester, Cheshire (25143931036)
The Rows Chester, Cheshire (25143931036)

Quaintways was a nightclub and music venue located at Northgate Street in Chester, England. It was owned and operated by entrepreneur Gordon Vickers. During its heyday of the 1960s and 1970s it hosted bands such as Slade, Fleetwood Mac, Thin Lizzy, Status Quo, Dire Straits, Uriah Heep, Judas Priest and the Sex Pistols.

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

Quaintways
Northgate Street, Chester Newtown

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: QuaintwaysContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.19085 ° E -2.8914 °
placeShow on map

Address

Starbucks

Northgate Street 18-20
CH1 2HA Chester, Newtown
England, United Kingdom
mapOpen on Google Maps

The Rows Chester, Cheshire (25143931036)
The Rows Chester, Cheshire (25143931036)
Share experience

Nearby Places

Browns of Chester
Browns of Chester

Browns was a department store in Chester established in 1780 by Susannah Brown. The store traded from its site on Chester's Eastgate Street from 1791 until 2021. Once regarded as the "Harrods of the North", the building interior contains many ornate features such as glass-domed roofs and elaborate plasterwork surrounding small chandeliers in the main entrance area. Some of the glass roof on the second floor has been concealed as it has been covered by the construction of the third-floor extension which contained the main café and Kalmora Spa. The oldest part of the store is housed in the Grade I listed Crypt Chambers, designed by T. M. Penson incorporating Georgian, Tudor and Gothic facades. Construction was completed in 1858. The building incorporates part of the Chester Rows. On the front of the tower at Row level is a blank scroll, on the east face is a recessed panel containing the initials W. B. (for William Brown), on the west face the initials are C. B. (for Charles Brown) and on the rear face is a scroll inscribed AD 1858: Crypt Chambers. The Gothic facade frontage is built over a medieval undercroft dating from the twelfth century. The undercroft most recently contained 'The Tea Press' tea room. Another extension to the building was completed in 1965 to link Browns to the nearby Grosvenor Shopping Centre. A new three-story extension was built in 2002 on the site formerly occupied by the offices of the Chester Chronicle. It was acquired by Debenhams in 1976. Browns was the only store in the group to retain its own trading name alongside the standard 'Debenhams' branding. Debenhams entered liquidation in early 2021 and all remaining stores closed during May that year. The building was owned by British Land. It was bought by Martin Property Group in 2022, along with the neighbouring Grosvenor Shopping Centre.