1
24-30 Mosley Street, Manchester
In some ways a typical Portland stone bank boasting rusticated ground floor, giant Ionic colonnades and corner turrets, but, particularly for its early date, the facades are plain, for example, there are no details around any of the windows. It was built for the Mercantile Bank of Lancashire, 1898, by J. Gibbons Sankey. Grade II listed.
Currently a hairdresser's at street level.
The picture is besmirched by tram paraphernalia.
Image: © Stephen Richards
Taken: 23 Jul 2011
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2
York St
Image: © N Chadwick
Taken: 18 May 2019
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Mosley Street, Manchester
Image: © David Dixon
Taken: 11 Feb 2016
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Tram, Mosley Street, Manchester
Tram approaching Piccadilly Gardens (off the picture to the right). Looking to buildings either side of the narrow turn for Marble Street.
Image: © Andrew Hill
Taken: 22 Jan 2014
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Manchester, Moseley Street
Looking along Moseley Street towards St Peter's Square from Piccadilly Gardens.
Image: © David Dixon
Taken: 15 Jun 2016
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Mosley Street
Looking down Mosley Street, from Piccadilly, in the direction of Saint Peter's Square.
Image: © David Dixon
Taken: 11 Mar 2010
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Bus and tram, Mosley Street
Buses and trams are the only vehicles allowed along Mosley Street, although traffic can cross at various points. The bus is crossing past the end of York Street.
Image: © Andrew Hill
Taken: 22 Jan 2014
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8
Benchmark on #38 Mosley Street
Ordnance Survey cut mark benchmark described on the Bench Mark Database at http://www.bench-marks.org.uk/bm61077
Image: © Roger Templeman
Taken: 22 Sep 2014
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Benchmark on the corner of West Mosley Street and York Street, Manchester
Image: © Benjamin Shaw
Taken: 29 Dec 2016
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10
14-16 Mosley Street, Manchester
Built as Cobden House (for the eponymous Richard), the first Manchester commission of esteemed local architect Edward Walters, 1839. Pevsner says it can "claim to be the first palazzo-inspired warehouse in the city." Red brick with spare stone trim, mostly around the segment-headed second-floor windows. The ground floor is a modern facsimilie. Grade II listed.
There were Lloyd's Bank cashpoints at ground floor, but otherwise the building looked unused.
Image: © Stephen Richards
Taken: 24 Jul 2011
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