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Not What You Meant?  There are 69 definitions for Central Station.  Also try: Manchester Central.

Manchester Central (Conference Centre)

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Manchester Central (Formerly known as the GMEX centre and Manchester International Conference Centre (MICC)) is an exhibition and conference centre housed in a former railway station in Manchester in England. The building was granted Grade I listed building status in 1963, but has since been downgraded to Grade II* status[1].

Contents

History

Manchester Central railway station

The complex started life as Manchester Central railway station, one of the city's main railway terminals. It was built between 1875–80 and closed to passengers on 5 May 1969.

The G-Mex Centre

In 1982 work commenced on converting the former railway station into an exhibition centre, and the G-Mex opened in 1986 [2] In 2001 the Manchester International Convention Centre (MICC) was added to the complex, with an 804 seat auditorium plus breakout rooms and Great Northern Hall. During 2005 the company running the G-MEX and MICC was bought by Manchester City Council. In September 2006 it was announced that the venue would regain its old name of Manchester Central in 2007[3]. Plans are currently being drawn up to extend the frontage down to the road boundary on Windmill Street.

Notable events

The G-MEX Centre used to host high profile rock concerts, e.g. Factory Records Festival Of The Tenth Summer in July 1986 celebrating the 10th anniversary of Punk (appearances of The Smiths and New Order) and Manchester's own James in a 1990 performance. In June 1992 Irish band U2 played the final indoor show of their elaborate Zoo TV Tour at the G-MEX Centre. The concert also doubled as an event to close down the Sellafield Nuclear Plant. G-MEX had a seating capacity for 9,500 people for end stage concerts. However it was expandable up to 17,500 for standing events. The G-MEX centre stopped hosting concerts in 1997 (the last one being performed by Oasis in December 1997), due to the popularity and size of the nearby MEN Arena which is Europe's biggest indoor concert venue. After a 9 year break, the venue was once again used as a concert venue in December 2006 with 2 shows by Snow Patrol, followed by 2 homecoming shows by Morrissey. The G-Mex was also the venue for gymnastics, weightlifting, judo and wrestling during the 2002 Commonwealth Games. In September 2006 it was used by the Labour Party for their Annual Conference, moving away from the traditional seaside venue of Blackpool, Bournemouth or Brighton. In addition to the Labour Party, this venue has hosted such prestigious clients as the CBI, Ecofin, Lib Dem Party and, in April 2006, the Conservative Party.

See also

References

  • Radford, B. (1988) Midland through the Peak, Paddock Wood : Unicorn, ISBN 1-85241-001-9

External links

Buildings and Structures in Manchester, England

Highrise (In height order): Piccadilly Tower^ | Beetham Tower | Albany Crown Tower^ | CIS Tower | City Tower | Manchester Arndale Tower | Manchester Town Hall | Manchester Civil Justice Centre | North Tower | Portland Tower | Great Northern Tower | Palace Hotel | B of the Bang Notable lowrise: Affleck's Palace | Urbis | Spinningfield Business District | The Green Building | Palace Theatre | London Road Fire Station | Manchester Central Library | Manchester Central Station | Deansgate railway station | Manchester Opera House | Contact Theatre | John Rylands University Library | Alan Turing Building | Whitworth Art Gallery | St Mary's Hospital | Manchester Royal Eye Hospital | Royal Exchange Theatre | Bridgewater Hall | The Haçienda Major railway stations: Manchester Piccadilly station | Manchester Airport station | Manchester Victoria station
Major complexes: Parrswood Entertainment Complex | Manchester Arndale Centre | The Trafford Centre | The Great Northern Warehouse | The Printworks
Sports venues: Manchester Aquatics Centre | National Squash Centre | Manchester Velodrome | Old Trafford Football Stadium | City of Manchester Stadium | Old Trafford Cricket Ground | MEN Arena
Lists of buildings: List of tallest buildings in Manchester | Grade I listed buildings in Manchester ^ Not yet constructed

Coordinates: 53°28′34″N, 2°14′51″W

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Manchester Central (Conference Centre) from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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