RopeWalks, Liverpool

Ropewalks is a name given to a vicinity of Liverpool city centre that runs from Lydia Ann Street to Renshaw Street widthways, and from Roscoe Street to Hanover Street lengthwise.

The term Ropewalks is a relatively modern description. It takes its name from the craft of rope-making for sailing ships that dominated the area until the 19th century. It is characterised by its long, straight streets running parallel to each other. The streets were built in this way to allow rope manufacturers to lay the ropes out lengthways during production. There are a large number of historic warehouse buildings and it owes much of its character to the rope-making industry. Nowadays, it has increasingly become the centre for Liverpool's night-time economy and creative industries.[1]

The area includes the Foundation for Art and Creative Technology, Europe’s oldest established Chinatown, the grand façade of St. Luke’s bombed-out Church, the Cream and Kazimier Clubs as well as a variety of cafés, bars and clubs.

Ropes were made in fields but ropemakers bought or rented thin long strips of land. It was the sale of these thin strips, one by one at different times, that lead to long thin streets with few interconnections. The streets themselves were not used in manufacture, the streets post-date the roperies.[2]

References

  1. City Centre - Inner Zones, Liverpool City Council
  2. Pevsner Liverpool Guide map of roperies

External links

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Coordinates: 53°24′09″N 2°58′46″W / 53.4025°N 2.9795°W / 53.4025; -2.9795

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