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Eagles Meadow: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 53°02′42″N 2°59′18″W / 53.04500°N 2.98833°W / 53.04500; -2.98833
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| number_of_stores = 63
| number_of_stores = 63

Revision as of 19:30, 26 September 2021

Eagles Meadow Shopping Centre
Canolfan Siopa Dôl Yr Eryod
Logo of Eagles Meadow Shopping Centre
Eagles Meadow's artificial waterfall in between two sets of stairs, facing north to former Anchor store Debenhams.
Map
LocationWrexham, Wales
Coordinates53°02′42″N 2°59′18″W / 53.04500°N 2.98833°W / 53.04500; -2.98833
Opening date30 October 2008
DeveloperWilson Bowden
OwnerEagles Meadow Shopping Centre LTD
No. of stores and services63
No. of anchor tenants1 (M&S), (formerly Debenhams until 2021)
Total retail floor area306,000 sq ft (28,400 m2)
No. of floors3
Parking970 spaces
Websiteeagles-meadow.co.uk

Eagles Meadow (Welsh: Dôl Yr Eryod) is a medium-sized shopping centre in Wrexham town centre. Previously this area has had a variety of uses over hundreds of years, originally used as stables for local gentry, and later a car park hosting a market, it had been developed into a shopping centre in 2008. The opening of Eagles Meadow was Thursday 30 October 2008 at 10am.

There is a webcam pointed at the Eagles Meadow bridge hosted by local hyperlocal site Wrexham.com.

History

Used as local gentry's stables.

During World War II, the area was used as a motorpool for elements of the U.S. Army's 83rd Infantry Division.[citation needed]

After the US Army withdrew its forces in Europe after the war, the buildings and treated surface they had created were ideal as a Horse Repository.[1]

In the early 1970s the land was divided between a large urban car park and a small retail development which included a new Asda superstore. A bridge, known locally as the Asda fly-over, was constructed to carry the town's ring road between Smithfield Road and Salop Road. After these developments, the car park was used as the main weekly market in the town, which moved from St George's Crescent (the original 'Beast Market').

Asda moved to a larger site in September 2000 and the weekly market eventually moved to a new location at the Waterworld car park.

A number of proposals were put forward for re-development of this land (which is close to St. Giles Church). Firstly John Lewis signed up to anchor a retail based development, which included a number of other stores and a supermarket. This development fell through, and the landowner and largest stakeholder Wrexham County Borough Council decided to put the land up for sale by tender.

A large number of tenders were received and in 2003 the winner was chosen as Wilson Bowden in partnership with architects Bernard Engle. The >£100m development includes two large department stores, cafes, bars, restaurants and over 40 other stores. It includes a number of landmark buildings and urban plazas, including a 'Spanish Steps' style area (see Gallery). A number of high rise city style apartments were constructed on the town centre side of the development. Construction began in early 2006 and opened to the public on 30 October 2008.

Controversy surrounded the new build, as several shops already located in the town centre moved to Eagles Meadow and closed their shops in the town centre. However, by 2021, this trend partially reversed, with numerous outlets moving back to larger units in the town centre, notably Sports Direct moving to the Henblas Street redevelopment in the town centre, and chains with multiple sites in Wrexham such as Greggs and Burger King closing their on-site stores whilst maintaining their town centre sites. The centre has since suffered from store closures from 2016 with many citing high business rates[2] (set by the Welsh Government, Wales-wide), increasing in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Wales which saw the closure of one of the centre's anchor stores, Debenhams in 2021.

Stores and amenities

Stores and other amenities at the centre include stores: Boots, Next, JD Sports, Marks & Spencer (with M&S Foodhall), Clintons, River Island, The Entertainer, and amenities Odeon Cinema and Tenpin bowling centre.

References

  1. ^ "So You Think You Know Wrexham... Aerial View 2". Wrexham.gov.uk. Retrieved 16 January 2014.
  2. ^ "Committee asks for joint lobbying effort to reduce town centre business rates to reflect they are no longer 'premium locations'". Wrexham.com. Retrieved 30 July 2021.