List of shopping arcades in Cardiff
Shopping arcades in Cardiff include indoor shopping centres and arcades in Cardiff city centre, Wales. Cardiff is known as the "City of Arcades",[1] due to the highest concentration of Victorian, Edwardian and contemporary indoor shopping arcades in any British city.[2]
Up until the 1790s there were only 25 retail shops in Cardiff. Most shopping at that time was made from market stalls.[3] The opening of the Royal Arcade in 1858, which was the first indoor arcade built in Cardiff, significantly increased the number of shops in Cardiff.
Cardiff's Victorian arcades have been attracting new shops and customers since emerging from the economic recession. Existing retailers have expanded which demonstrates resurgence of the capital’s unique shopping malls, according to the landlords, Curzon, who is responsible for the High Street, Castle, Duke Street and Wyndham arcades. The area around the arcades will be affected by pedestrianisation of High Street in late 2010, to create the £2.5m Castle Quarter. This is expected to attract more shoppers and tourists to the Victorian arcades.[4]
The total length of Cardiff's city centre arcades is 797m (2,655 ft).[5]
Current shopping arcades
Victorian and Edwardian
Name | Image | Year opened | Entrances | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Central Market | 1891 | St. Mary Street Trinity Street | Central Market was designed by the county engineer William Harpur. 349 stalls were in the original layout. The market opened in 1891 and has entrances on St. Mary Street and Trinity Street in the Castle Quarter[6] Central Market is a Grade II* Listed building.
The market consists of two shopping levels, a ground floor and a balcony level which wraps around the market exterior walls on the interior . There is a large H. Samuel clock above the High Street entrance , which was presumably donated by the H. Samuel jewellery chain, which once had a store just outside the High Street entrance. Traders in the market offer a variety of fresh produce, cooked food, various delicacies and more durable goods. A trader of note is Ashton's the fishmongers,[7] who have traded in the market since 1866 at the Trinity Street entrance selling a wide range of fresh seafood. | |
Castle Arcade | 1887 | Castle Street High Street | Castle Arcade opened in 1887 and is a Grade II* Listed building. The Castle arcade, as the name suggests, runs from opposite Cardiff Castle to High Street, north of St Mary St, in the Castle Quarter. The arcade has a variety of small boutique shops as well as cafes and delicatessens, and fair-trade and organic shops.[5]
One of the longer of Cardiff's famous Victorian arcades, Castle Arcade is home to a variety of shops selling, among other things, crystals, air pistols, fancy dress, books and clothes. There are several shops on the gallery level. | |
Dominions Arcade | 1921 | Queen Street Crockherberton Lane | ||
Duke Street Arcade | 1902 | Duke Street High Street Arcade | Duke Street Arcade opened in 1902 is a Grade II Listed building. Duke Street Arcade joins High Street arcade, and is just opposite Cardiff Castle, in the Castle Quarter. Duke Street Arcade is lined with stores including hairdressers, bridal shops and Welsh gift shops.[5] | |
High Street Arcade | 1885 | High Street St John Street | High Street Arcade opened in 1886 and is a Grade II Listed building. It has entrances on High Street and St John Street in the Castle Quarter. High Street arcade is known for its range of fashion stores which include designer clothes, individual fashions, jewellery and vintage clothes as well as one of the oldest surf and skateboarding shops in Wales, City Surf.[8] One will also find children's clothes and toys, gifts and a New York Deli in the arcade.[5] | |
Morgan Arcade | 1896 | St. Mary Street The Hayes | Morgan Arcade opened in 1896 and is a Grade II Listed building. Morgan Arcade is the considered best preserved of Cardiff's arcades, with first-floor Venetian windows and original slender wooden storefronts. It has entrances on St. Mary Street and The Hayes. It has shops such as The Plan, which specialises in organic and Fair Trade food. Neals yard, next door, sells organic herbal skin care and body care products.[5] | |
Royal Arcade | 1858 | St. Mary Street The Hayes | The Royal Arcade is the oldest arcade in the city, having been built in 1858. It is a Grade II Listed building. Royal Arcade still has some of the original shopfronts at numbers 29, 30 and 32 St. Mary Street. Running from The Hayes through to St Mary Street, towards the south of the city centre, adjacent to the New St David's 2 development, independent shops are found such as Wally's Delicatessen, who have been in the arcade for 60 years, and those specialising in Welsh textiles, gifts and homeware.[5] | |
Wyndham Arcade | 1887 | St. Mary Street Mill Lane | Wyndham Arcade is a Grade II Listed building. It opened in 1887 and has entrances on St. Mary Street and Mill Lane, running parallel to Cardiff's Café Quarter. This Edwardian arcade is home to several restaurants including ASK.[5] | |
Contemporary
Name | Image | Year opened | Entrances | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
St. David's Centre | 1981 | Queen Street, Hill's Street Working Street Queens Arcade | St. David's Centre opened to the public in January 1981, although it did not officially open until 24 March 1982. It is joined internally with Queens Arcade. The extension to St. David's Centre (St. David's 2) opened to the public on 22 October 2009. The architects for the project were Benoy and the constructors were Bovis Lend Lease. The development includes the Grand Arcade and Hayes Arcade.[9] | |
Queens Arcade | 1994 | Queen Street, Working Street St. David's Centre | Queens Arcade opened on 28 April 1994, and was built on the former Allders department store and Queen Street Arcade site. The Arcade has two levels, and is unusual in that the levels are sloped, so that ground floor entrance on Queen Street becomes the upper floor at the Working Street entrance and the ground floor entrance at Working Street becomes the lower floor at the Queen Street entrance. | |
Capitol Centre | 1990 | Queen Street | The Capitol Centre, which was previously known as the Capitol Exchange Centre, opened in 1990. The Capitol Centre is built on the site of the former Capitol Cinema and Theatre. | |
Former shopping arcades
Name | Image | Year opened | Year closed | Entrances | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Queen Street Arcade | 1866[10] | 1987 | Queen Street Working Street | Next to Allders. Both were demolished, then rebuilt as Queens Arcade (above). Included the Washing Institute[11] | |
Andrews Arcade | Queen Street | ||||
Oxford Arcade | 1970s[12] | 2006 | The Hayes St. Davids Link | ||
Queens West Shopping Centre | 1987[13] | Circa 1994 | Queen Street The Friary | Featured a glass lift looking out over the Friary. This shopping centre still exists, and is shown on maps, but all shops are now entered directly from the street or via escalators, so the mall corridors are now inaccessible. The top floor, which used to be a foodhall, is now entirely occupied by one shop.[14] | |
Wharton Street Arcade (James Howells) | 1924[15] | Wharton Street Howells | |||
Dickens Arcade | Castle Street | Used to include a cafe and a bookshop in the 80s/90s called Paperback Exchange.[16] | |||
Old Arcade | 1835[17] | Church Street | Alongside the Old Arcade pub. The pub was named after this arcade.[18] | ||
See also
- List of places in Cardiff
- List of cultural venues in Cardiff
- List of leading shopping streets and districts by city
Notes
- ↑ "Arcades were Victorian version of St David’s 2". Media Wales. Retrieved 2010-03-14.
- ↑ The Free Library A world behind the shop fronts
- ↑ "A History 1700s". Cardiff Market. Retrieved 2008-06-13.
- ↑ Wales Online: Cardiff's Victorian arcades fight back
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Why Cardiff Quaint Arcades
- ↑ "Late 1800s". Cardiff Market. Retrieved 2008-07-03.
- ↑ http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/341166
- ↑ "City Surf". City Surf. Retrieved 2014-10-28.
- ↑ "ST. DAVID'S 2 MATCHES CITY BLUEPRINT". Capital Shopping Centres. Retrieved 2008-11-17.
- ↑ "Cardiff Timeline". cardiffians.co.uk. Retrieved 2009-04-02.
- ↑ "Washing Institute". walesonline.co.uk. Retrieved 2009-04-28.
- ↑ "The arcase game". Building Design. Retrieved 2009-04-28.
- ↑ "WORLD HISTORY ENCYCLOPEDIA". localhistories.org. Retrieved 2008-07-13.
- ↑ "JJB sports". americanairlines.wcities.com. Retrieved 2009-04-28.
- ↑ "Records of James Howell and Co Ltd, department store, Cardiff, Wales". archiveshub.ac.uk. Retrieved 2008-07-13.
- ↑ Kemp, David (1992). "Chapter 5: Cardiff". The pleasures and treasures of Britain. Dundurn Group. p. 210. ISBN 1-55002-159-1. Retrieved 2009-06-03.
- ↑ "Cardiff Centenary Walk". Cardiff Council. Retrieved 2009-01-11.
- ↑ "Cardiff Timeline". cardiffians.co.uk. Retrieved 2009-04-02.
External links
- Media related to Shopping arcades in Cardiff at Wikimedia Commons
- Cardiff Council shopping website
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