1
Bare Essentials on Broughton Street
Image: © Ian S
Taken: 3 Sep 2011
0.07 miles
2
Bare Essentials on Broughton Street
Image: © Ian S
Taken: 3 Sep 2011
0.07 miles
3
Broughton Street, Strangeways, Manchester
Image: © Ian S
Taken: 3 Sep 2011
0.07 miles
4
Sherborne Street, Cheetham Hill, Manchester
I took this on Sherborne Street, with Cheetham Park on my right. The tower in the distance is part of Strangeways Prison. It is a ventilation tower and rises approximately 234 feet.
Image: © Tricia Neal
Taken: 8 Apr 2014
0.08 miles
5
Cheetham Hill
Wasteland, ready for development at Cheetham Hill.
Image: © Peter McDermott
Taken: 10 Apr 2022
0.11 miles
6
Cheetham Park
The disused bandstand at Cheetham Park.
Image: © Peter McDermott
Taken: 10 Apr 2022
0.12 miles
7
Bandstand, Cheetham Park, Manchester
Cheetham Park, more commonly known as Elizabeth Street Park, is a Victorian park situated at the Cheetham ward of north Manchester. It was opened in 1886 but in recent years it has been neglected and is currently not well used. The bandstand has been a Grade II listed structure since 1994: "Bandstand. c.1890-1910; restored. Cast-iron, wrought-iron and wood, with slate roof. Hexagonal plan. Brick plinth, cast-iron columns, wrought-iron railings bowed in profile, with simple Art Nouveau inverted heart-shape panels, C20 steps at north corner; simple iron brackets to purlins; wooden ribbed and boarded under surface to swept slated canopy roof with apex finial."
Image: © Tricia Neal
Taken: 8 Apr 2014
0.12 miles
8
Manchester Ice Palace
Disused ice rink, now put to industrial use.
From an article in the Manchester Evening News:
Opened by Lord Lytton on October 25 1910, clad in white marble, it hosted the National Ice Skating Championships a year later and the World Championships in 1922. A plant across the road provided the ice. At the end of each day, the churned ice from the rink was pumped through an underground pipe to iceworks. Fresh iced water was then pumped back to refresh the rink’s surface overnight.
The Ice Palace was the only ice hockey rink in Britain during the early 1920s. A game between The Army and The Rest was played at the Ice Palace in November 1923 to select the British team for the 1924 Winter Olympics.
It was closed in 1915 and used to manufacture observation balloons for the war effort. It reopened on November 21, 1919. It was requisitioned by the Ministry of Aircraft Production in 1941 and later reopened as an ice rink on March 21, 1947. For the next two decades until it closed in 1967, it was one of the most popular places to socialise in Cheetham, with 2000 seats for spectators.
As tastes changed in entertainment it tried to adapt by screening films and hosting social nights. In the late 1960s it functioned as a Mecca bingo hall and was then used as a milk bottling plant and remains in use today for clothing outlets. Recognised by English Heritage as a building of historical significance and in danger of being lost, it is considered to be one of Manchester’s forgotten palaces, along with Victoria Baths and the Grosvenor Picture Palace.
Image: © Peter McDermott
Taken: 21 Oct 2018
0.14 miles
9
Cheetham Park, Cheetham Hill, Manchester
I have no idea where these stones came from or what purpose they serve, but they were stacked up just inside the gate of the park. Sherborne Street is just beyond the railings.
Image: © Tricia Neal
Taken: 8 Apr 2014
0.14 miles
10
Detail of 50 Derby Street, Manchester
Decorative terracotta centrepiece of the old ice palace.
Wider view:
Image
Image: © Stephen Richards
Taken: 24 May 2016
0.14 miles