La gare de Manchester Piccadilly est une gare ferroviaire du Royaume-Uni, située au centre de la ville de Manchester, en Angleterre. Elle dessert notamment l'aéroport de Manchester, Londres, Birmingham, le sud du pays de Galles, la côte sud de l'Angleterre, Édimbourg et Glasgow en Écosse et diverses stati gare britanniques gérées par Network Rail. C'est la plus grande et la plus fréquentée des cinq gares centrales de Manchester, les autres étant Manchester Victoria, Salford Central, Deansgate et Manchester Oxford Road. C'est la quatrième gare la plus fréquentée du Royaume-Uni en dehors de Londres, derrière les gares de Birmingham, Glasgow et Leeds. Plus de 28,5 millions d'usagers utilisent la gare chaque année selon Network Rail.
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502 m
Jackson's Warehouse
Jackson's Warehouse (also known as Jacksons Warehouse) is a 19th-century warehouse in the Piccadilly Basin area of Manchester, England.
507 m
Oxygen Towers
Oxygen Towers (also known as Oxygen) are a cluster of three individual but interlinked residential towers on Store Street in Manchester, England. Completed in 2021, the 110-metre (359 ft), 32-storey Tower 1 is the tallest element, with Towers 2 and 3 having 16 and 10 storeys respectively. The buildings were designed by 5plus Architects and Tower 1 is the 22nd-tallest building in Greater Manchester as of December 2025.
540 m
Great Ancoats Street
Great Ancoats Street is a street in the inner suburb of Ancoats, Manchester, England. It forms one of the stretches of the city's inner ring road.
A number of cotton mills built in the early and mid-Victorian period are nearby, some of which have been converted into residential or office buildings, such as Albion Mill. The Daily Express Building is on Great Ancoats Street, as is the former Central Retail Park and various hotels.
Great Ancoats Street forms the western boundary of the regenerated New Islington area of Manchester on the side of the Rochdale Canal.
558 m
Ancoats railway station
Ancoats Station was a goods station operated by the Midland Railway to handle freight traffic in Manchester, England, on land bought in the Ancoats district from the Mosley family, whose adjacent family seat Ancoats Hall was also taken over by the railway company for business use.
571 m
Brownsfield Mill
Brownsfield Mill, located on Binns Place, Great Ancoats Street in Manchester, England, is an early 19th century room and cotton-spinning power mill constructed in 1825. Hartwell describes it as "unusually complete and well preserved". The chimney is now Manchester's oldest surviving mill chimney. The building housed the A.V. Roe and Company aviation factory in the early 20th century. In 1988, it was designated a Grade II* listed building.
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