1
Oxford Street
As the A34 reaches Manchester City Centre it changes from Oxford Road to Oxford Street. Ahead is Manchester Library at St Peter's Square. On the right is the St James' Buildings, a Grade II listed building built by Clegg, Fryer & Penman for the Calico Printers' Association in 1912. Built in the so-called "baroque" style it is a nine storey building containing 1000 rooms.It is clad in Portland stone, with 27 bays opening directly onto Oxford Street. It has an equally huge central gable entrance with rising classical orders, broken pediment and topped by an octagonal lantern. The nine storey office building features an impressive marble reception area with a sweeping staircase. The Rochdale Canal runs underneath it. At one point it was a theatre and music hall. The ninth floor was made up entirely of executive toilets. At the ground level there are now many small shops, including a photographic studio, a grocery, a couple of sandwich bars, and a florist boutique.
Image: © Gerald England
Taken: 2 Aug 2010
0.02 miles
2
Oxford Street
With the Palace Theatre on the right.
Image: © Thomas Nugent
Taken: 28 Feb 2011
0.02 miles
3
Rochdale Canal, Lock#88
Lock#88 is almost surrounded by buildings at the back of Oxford Street.
Lock#88 is one of the "Rochdale Nine". When the rest of the Rochdale Canal was closed to navigation in 1952, these nine locks which link the Ashton and Bridgewater Canals, through the centre of Manchester, were the only part of the canal to remain open, forming part of the "Cheshire Ring".
Image: © David Dixon
Taken: 15 Sep 2012
0.02 miles
4
St James's Buildings, Oxford Street, Manchester
Oblique view of this Portland stone monster. And I mean that in a nice way. Grand Edwardian Baroque crowned by a central tower. Built in 1912-13 to the designs of Clegg, Fryer & Penman. Grade II listed.
It was built for the Calico Printers' Association. Calico printing having waned somewhat, it has been converted into multiple-occupancy modern offices.
Image: © Stephen Richards
Taken: 23 Jun 2011
0.02 miles
5
St James's Building, Oxford St
Grade II listed. http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-454853-st-james-buildings-
Image: © N Chadwick
Taken: 28 Aug 2014
0.02 miles
6
Lock 88, Rochdale Canal
Lock 88, hemmed in by buildings, drops the canal under Oxford Street in the heart of Manchester.
Image: © Stephen McKay
Taken: 30 Aug 2010
0.02 miles
7
Manchester: Rochdale Canal, 1994
At this time the short stretch of the Rochdale Canal from Castlefields to Ducie Street, linking the Bridgewater and Ashton Canals, was the only navigable stretch, and slipped almost ignored through the city centre. By the early 1990s city centre regeneration had begun to open up some areas and to restore tired warehouse areas, and the canal area was less seedy than it had been ten years before, but the process was still in its early stages.
Image: © Christopher Hilton
Taken: 19 Nov 1994
0.02 miles
8
Rochdale Canal, Lock 88
Lock#88 is almost surrounded by buildings at the back of Oxford Street.
Lock#88 is one of the "Rochdale Nine". When the rest of the Rochdale Canal was closed to navigation in 1952, these nine locks which link the Ashton and Bridgewater Canals, through the centre of Manchester, were the only part of the canal to remain open, forming part of the "Cheshire Ring".
Image: © David Dixon
Taken: 3 Nov 2013
0.02 miles
9
Lock 88, Rochdale Canal, Manchester
The buildings over the canal front onto Oxford Street.
Image: © habiloid
Taken: 7 Sep 2019
0.02 miles
10
Rochdale Canal Lock #88
Lock#88 is almost surrounded by buildings at the back of Oxford Street. The lock, which was built for the Rochdale Canal Company in 1804, lowers the canal allowing boats to pass under Oxford Street in the city centre. It is Grade II-listed (Historic England List Entry Number: 1270857 https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1270857 ).
Lock#88 is one of the "Rochdale Nine". When the rest of the Rochdale Canal was closed to navigation in 1952, these nine locks which link the Ashton and Bridgewater Canals, through the centre of Manchester, were the only part of the canal to remain open, forming part of the "Cheshire Ring".
Image: © David Dixon
Taken: 24 Apr 2021
0.02 miles