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Liverpool city centre

Coordinates:53°24′25″N2°59′29″W / 53.4070°N 2.9915°W /53.4070; -2.9915
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Commercial, cultural, financial and historical heart of Liverpool, England

Central Business District in England
Liverpool city centre
Central Business District
Aerial view of Liverpool city centre
Liverpool city centre is located in Merseyside
Liverpool city centre
Liverpool city centre
Location withinMerseyside
Population36,770 
Metropolitan borough
Metropolitan county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townLIVERPOOL
Postcode districtL1,2,3,6,7,8
Dialling code0151
PoliceMerseyside
FireMerseyside
AmbulanceNorth West
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Merseyside
53°24′25″N2°59′29″W / 53.4070°N 2.9915°W /53.4070; -2.9915

Liverpool city centre is the administrative, commercial, cultural, financial and historical centre ofLiverpool and theLiverpool City Region, England. There are different definitions of the city centre forurban planning andlocal government; however, the boundary of Liverpool city centre is broadly marked by the inner city districts ofVauxhall,Everton,Edge Hill,Kensington andToxteth.

At the2023 United Kingdom local elections, the population of Liverpool city centre was 36,770 based on the fiveelectoral wards that officially make up the city centre.[1] Over 6 million people live within an hour of Liverpool City Centre. In 2022, there were almost 80 million visits to the City Centre.[2][3]

Liverpool was granted borough status in 1207, and the original seven streets of the settlement now form part of the central business district of Liverpool city centre. Many of Liverpool's most famous landmarks are located in the city centre. In 2019, Liverpool was the fourth most visited city in England for domestic visitors and the fifth most visited city in the UK for international visitors.[4]

Liverpool city centre is one of the most architecturally significant locations in the country. Examples of architecture areLiverpool Cathedral,[5]St. George's Hall,[6] theRoyal Liver Building,Oriel Chambers (the world's first metal-framed glass curtain walled building) andWest Tower.[7] Six areas within Liverpool city centre form theLiverpool Maritime Mercantile City, which is a formerUNESCO designatedWorld Heritage Site.[8]

Map

[edit]
Map of Liverpool City Centre.
Neighbouring districts to Liverpool city centre

Definitions

[edit]

Liverpool Local Plan

[edit]
Liverpool City Centre (Local Plan map)

Liverpool's most recentLocal Plan is designed to guide the long-term spatial development of the city from 2013 to 2033. It will assistLiverpool City Council in making planning decisions for development proposals and provides detailed advice tocity planners on where specific types of development should be built, for example, housing, shops, offices, transport and other infrastructure facilities.[9]

Contained within the Local Plan is a policies map that delimits the boundaries of Liverpool City Centre. Based on this definition, the perimeter of Liverpool City Centre is as follows:

Bramley-Moore Dock, Regent Road, Boundary Street, Luton Street,Northern Line rail track, Chadwick Street, Chisenhale Street, Vauxhall Road, Ford Street,Scotland Road, Byrom Way, Hunter Street, Islington, Salisbury Street, Langsdale Street, Shaw Street, College Street South, Brunswick Road, Low Hill, Hall Lane, Mount Vernon Green, Irvine Street, Mason Street, Grinfield Street, Crown Street, Upper Parliament Street, St James Place, Stanhope Street, Gore Street, Hill Street, Sefton Street, Brunswick Way, Waterfront Perimeter.

Therefore, using the Local Plan definition for the purposes of planning policies and redevelopment, Liverpool City Centre includes the following areas based on their specific characteristics, role and function:

Liverpool City Centre from above with officialLocal Plan boundary in red

Local Government

[edit]

Another definition of Liverpool city centre can be found inlocal government.

At the2023 United Kingdom local elections, a radical redesign of Liverpool's city map took place which included changes to the city'sward boundaries, the creation of newward areas and a reduction in the overall number of elected city councillors.

Further changes to the way in which the city was managed came in July 2023 with the introduction of 13 new neighbourhoods across the city. The modernised neighbourhoods were formed through the amalgamation of the newly created electoral wards and were designed to better manage community services such ashousing,waste management, thehighway network, parking, oranti-social behaviour.

The new City Centre neighbourhood incorporates 5 electoral wards: Brownlow Hill, Canning, City Centre North, City Centre South and Waterfront South. Combined, they have a total population of 36,770.[10][11][12]

Liverpool city centre electoral wards (2023 United Kingdom local elections)
These electoral wards were created in 2023 following aBoundary Commission review.
Liverpool City Council electoral wardCity councillors[13]Population
(Census 2021[14])
Brownlow Hill27,358
Canning29,355
City Centre North28,325
City Centre South38,838
Waterfront South12,894
Totals1036,770

Areas

[edit]
Liverpool city centre skyline as seen from theRiver Mersey featuringPrince's Dock on the left,Pier Head,Mann Island Buildings andMuseum of Liverpool in the centre and part of theRoyal Albert Dock in the far right

Distinctive areas that define the centre of Liverpool include the following (the list is not exhaustive):

Baltic Triangle

[edit]
Main article:Baltic Triangle
TheGustav Adolf Church (Scandinavian Seamen's Church) in the Baltic Triangle

TheBaltic Triangle is defined by Liverpool City Council as the triangular shaped slice of the city bounded by Liver Street, Park Lane, St James Street, Hill Street, Sefton Street and Wapping.[15]

It is believed to have got its name from the number oftimberwarehouses andyards used for storing timber from theBaltic countries in the 1800s.[16]

Evidence of this period still survives in theGrade II* listedScandinavian Seamen's Church and the Grade II* Baltic Fleet pub.[17]

The area is home to a range of repurposed warehouses and industrial units which have been converted into offices andstudios for a growing number ofcreative anddigital businesses, hotels, a number oflive music venues, independent food and drink traders. The area is also known for itsstreet art and theCains Brewery Village which accommodates coffee shops, markets and bars.[18]

Canning (Sometimes referred to as the Georgian Quarter or Abercromby)

[edit]
Main article:Canning, Liverpool
Georgiantownhouses on Canning Street, Liverpool

This area is often referred to as the 'Georgian Quarter' due to the heavy prevalence ofGeorgian era townhouses built for Liverpool's wealthier residents in the1800s away from the dirt and smoke of the city'sindustrial areas. The area is characterised bycobbled streets,traditional pubs, restaurants and cultural venues. Liverpool's two cathedrals (Liverpool Anglican Cathedral and theLiverpool Metropolitan Cathedral) can be found at either end ofHope Street. The quarter also incorporates theRoyal Liverpool Philharmonic,Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts,Everyman Theatre andUnity Theatre.[19][20][21]

Cavern Quarter

[edit]
Main article:Mathew Street
Mathew Street showingThe Cavern Club on the left.

The Cavern Quarter is defined as the narrow streets andalleys bounded by Victoria Street,Stanley Street,Whitechapel,Lord Street and North John Street. The area lies within theLiverpool Maritime Mercantile City boundary and contains historic warehouse buildings from the city's majortrading history where some of the goods sold in the oldSt John's Market onWilliamson Square were stored.[22]

The Cavern Quarter takes its name fromThe Cavern Club onMathew Street, whereThe Beatles played 292 times in the1960s. Mathew Street itself is a major tourist attraction, especially for Beatles andMerseybeat related tourism. A number of Beatles themed hotels and museums can be found in and around the street.[23]

Mathew Street also contains theLiverpool Wall of Fame which features 54 gold discs to represent the 54Liverpool based musicians who have achievedNumber 1 in theUK Singles Chart since 1952. Liverpool was awardedUNESCO City of Music status in 2015 and is recognised as the 'World Capital of Pop’ by theGuinness Book of Records.[24][25]

Chinatown

[edit]
Main article:Chinatown, Liverpool
See also:British Chinese
Chinese Arch atChinatown, Liverpool. The biggest Chinese Arch outside of Asia.

Liverpool is home to the oldestChinese community in Europe, which has been established in the city since the 1860s due to the historic trade links between thePort of Shanghai andPort of Liverpool.

Chinesesailors andimmigrants first settled close to the docks in Cleveland Square, however, followingWorld War One and demolition of the original neighbourhood, a new Chinatown began to emerge slowly inland. Some time in the 1940s, the community began to settle en masse in totenements on Kent Street, Pitt Street and Upper Frederick Street. This was helped in part by Liverpool's position as a reserve pool for Chinese Merchant sailors in theBritish Merchant Navy.

By the 1970s, Nelson Street became the centre ofChinatown and the community and businesses extended into nearby Berry Street, Duke Street, Upper Pitt Street and Great George Square.

Chinatown today includes manyChinese restaurants,supermarkets, wholesalers,travel agencies,legal andaccountancy firms. Some of the services include the Liverpool Chinese Business Association, Che Gong Tong Chinese Association (UK), See Yep Chinese Association, Wah Sing Chinese Community Centre, Liverpool Chinese Gospel Church, Hoy Yin Chinese Association and The Pagoda Youth Orchestra, which is the largestChinese youth orchestra in Europe. The Nook House, a pub at the heart of Chinatown, had a long history associated with the Chinese community.[26]

Nelson Street looking up to the Chinese Arch

Liverpool'sChinatown arch is the largest arch of its kind outside of China at 15 meters tall and was a gift from Liverpool'stwin city Shanghai. It features 200 dragons and five roofs.[27]

Liverpool's four universities also attract a growing number of Chinese students. With almost one in five of its students of Chinese origin,Liverpool University is ranked amongst the top three UK universities with more than a quarter of their fee income coming directly from Chinese students. It has one of the highest number of Chinese students in the UK.[28][29]

In recent years, due to this growing population of Chinese students and their desire to socialise closer to theuniversity campus, many Chinese businesses have spread out across the City Centre in places such as Myrtle Parade near the University of Liverpool and further along Berry Street towards Renshaw Street. This has contributed to a reduction in focus on the traditional Chinatown by younger Chinese people.[30]

Commercial district

[edit]
The commercial district at night
West Tower
Post & Echo Building

Liverpool's "commercial district" is a term given by business to distinguish Liverpool's business and commercial centre from the rest of the city centre.

It is centred onOld Hall Street and is the financial heart of Liverpool. Many businesses and companies have a strong presence in the area. Since the mid-2000s many new building and redevelopment projects have taken place in the commercial district, which is now home to some of the tallest buildings inNorth West England. Some notable properties within the commercial district include theheadquarters of the Post & Echo and offices ofHM Passport Office,BT andMaersk Line. With 36,000 m2 (390,000 sq ft) of floor space,New Hall Place is the largest office building in Liverpool,The Plaza is another large office building in the commercial district which is occupied by a number of different companies. The table below shows the tallest buildings within the commercial district (excluding buildings in neighbouringPrince's Dock orPier Head – a more detailed list of the tallest buildings and structures in the remainder of Liverpool city centre can beseen here).

RankName (Alternate Names)Height
m (ft)
FloorsYearCoordinates
1West Tower
(Beetham West Tower)
140 (459)
01.0
40
2007
2Beetham Tower
90 (300)
16.0
29
2004
3Unity Residential
86 (282)
16.0
27
2007
4New Hall Place
(The Capital, Royal & Sun Alliance Building)
76 (249)
16.0
13
1974
5Metropolitan House
(City Tower, Post & Echo Building)
73 (240)
16.0
18
1974
6Unity Commercial
65 (213)
16.0
16
2007
7The Plaza
(Sir John Moores Building)
65 (213)
16.0
18
1965
8Silkhouse Court
56 (184)
16.0
15
1970

Cultural Quarter

[edit]
St George's Hall, Liverpool

The Cultural Quarter marks a grand gateway into Liverpool City Centre and encompassesLime Street Station,St.George's Hall, St George's Plateau,St John's Gardens and theLiverpool Empire Theatre.William Brown Street features theWorld Museum,Liverpool Central Library andWalker Art Gallery.

Until the late 18th century, the area was on the periphery of the city. However, from the mid 19th century until around 1900, Liverpool's wealthy merchants and entrepreneurs helped to build the series ofmuseums,art galleries,libraries, hotels, gardens and monuments (see alsoMonument to the King's Liverpool Regiment andWellington's Column).

The buildings were designed to become major public educational, civic and cultural institutions of monumental proportions to reflect Liverpool's status as thesecond city of theBritish Empire. The group was later complemented by theArt DecoQueensway tunnel entrance in 1934.

Most of the buildings in and around William Brown Street are built in the stone facedclassical style. The pavements are made ofYorkstone; and the street furniture, although varied, is often of historic interest to complement the buildings.

World Museum onWilliam Brown Street

St George's Plateau has been the focus of many of the most significant events in the city's history. In the present day, it is most often used for staging public events orpolitical demonstrations, or as the starting point for important marches in the city. Events have includedChristmas markets, political speeches of national importance,Remembrance Day events, an assembly point for Liverpool's annualPride march and a live show to a crowd of 30,000 people to mark Liverpool's hosting of theEurovision Song Contest 2023.[31][32][33][34][35][36]

Islington

[edit]
King George III statue at Monument Place

Islington is a neighbourhood on the eastern approach to Liverpool city centre based on amajor road called Islington and the streets in and around London Road. The area is characterised primarily by low-density warehousing,wholesalers,ethnic supermarkets specialising in food from around the world anddiscount retail units. There is also a growing residential population of students andkey workers, particularlydoctors and nurses associated with the city'sRoyal Liverpool University Hospital.

The area has a longstanding history with independent businesses associated with thefabric and textiles industry. Thus, for the purposes of urban planning, it has been labelled as 'The Fabric District'.

In recent history, the area has been criticised for falling intodecline and neglect. Thelong term plan aims to regenerate the area for mixed uses with a focus onmakers, manufacturing, andtech based businesses. This will be complimented by retail,leisure and residential.

A market operates several days per week on Monument Place.[37][38][39]

Knowledge Quarter

[edit]
Main article:Knowledge Quarter, Liverpool
The Spine Building at Paddington Village, home to theRoyal College of Physicians

The Knowledge Quarter is a name adopted by Liverpool City Council for a 450 acre (180 hectare) district which has developed as an important place for some of the world's most influential players in science, health, technology, education, medicine and culture based industries.

The Knowledge Quarter comprises several interconnected areas including the vicinity around London Road, the Fabric District, Islington and Paddington Village. There is a concentration of establishments and institutions whose purposes revolve aroundbio-sciences, health-related research, new scientific discoveries, preventing and fightinginfectious diseases, developing new medicines and innovation indigital andsensor technology.

With over £2 billion[40] in public and private sector investment, the Knowledge Quarter has undergone substantial regeneration. This funding has facilitated the development of new facilities, infrastructure enhancements, and advanced research programmes, thereby positioning the area as a key hub for innovation and economic growth.

The following are found within the area:Royal Liverpool University Hospital,Clatterbridge Cancer Centre NHS Foundation Trust,University of Liverpool's main campus, parts ofLiverpool John Moores University at Copperas Hill and Byrom Street,Material Innovation Factory, Digital Innovation Factory, Link Creative Campus, BioCampus,Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine and Liverpool Science Park. Paddington Village features the Liverpool International College and was chosen as the UK'sNorthern Headquarters for theRoyal College of Physicians.[41][42]

Liverpool One shopping complex

Main retail area

[edit]

Liverpool's main retail area is ranked amongst the top 5 retail destinations in the UK and is the principal retail destination within theLiverpool City Region. The area encompassesLiverpool One,Church Street,Lord Street,Williamson Square,St Johns Shopping Centre,Metquarter,Clayton Square Shopping Centre and numerous adjoining and connecting streets.

Liverpool One alone attracts over 22 million visitors per year and provides 1.65 million square feet of retail space based around an open-air complex of over 170 stores, bars and restaurants, a fourteen screen cinema, indoor golf courses and a five acre park. It spans acrossParadise Street, South John Street, Peter's Lane, Hanover Street andChavasse Park.

Bold Street is the focus of more independent shops and services.In total, some 9,300 people are employed in retailing in Liverpool City Centre.[43][44]

Pride Quarter

[edit]
Main article:Pride Quarter, Liverpool
The Lisbon, Liverpool's oldest gay pub

The Lisbon pub on the corner ofStanley Street and Victoria Street has catered for theLGBT community since well before the 1970s. During the 1970s, the area in and around Stanley Street became more relevant as anLGBT neighbourhood with the opening of Paco's Bar, Jody's and The Curzon.[45]

Prior to this, the established meeting places for the largely underground gay community were in a number of venues surrounding Queen Square, however, due to their demolition to make way for the newSt Johns Shopping Centre, the community began to give more focus to Stanley Street. By the 1980s and 1990s, the Stanley Street gay village continued to grow with the opening of moregay bars and clubs.[46][47]

In 2011, Liverpool became the first city in the UK to officially recognise its gay quarter withrainbow street signs. New street signs featuring a rainbow arch were unveiled on Stanley Street, Cumberland Street, Temple Lane, Eberle Street and Temple Street to acknowledge the significance and history of the area for the city's LGBT community.[48][49][50]

In 2012, the gay district was rebranded as the Pride Quarter with support from theLCR Pride Foundation and Marketing Liverpool. Thirteen LGBT venues located in the quarter celebrated its establishment with an indoor festival.[51]

Today, Liverpool's Pride Quarter attracts thousands of people every week from all over the UK and beyond who come to experience the varied nightlife.[52]

Ropewalks

[edit]
Main article:RopeWalks, Liverpool
Concert Square, one of Liverpool's main nightlife areas inRopeWalks

Ropewalks is the area bounded by Hanover Street, Back Bold Street, Leece Street, Roscoe Street, Upper Duke Street, Great George Street, Great George Square, Upper Pitt Street, Kent Street, Lydia Ann Street and Hanover Street.

Due to Liverpool's growth as a major internationalseaport in the18th Century, which included theworld's first commercial enclosed dock,merchants of the town expanded their trade in a wide variety of commodities. Such a boom in trade led to merchants needing premises for homes, warehouses and associated uses. Due to itstopography and proximity to the docks andCustom House, Ropewalks was a practical place to lay out streets that would accommodate grand merchant's residences, cultural institutions and shops. Interconnecting and narrower streets would contain the industries, warehousing and poorer housing.

Due to the long, straight, parallel design of some of the streets, they became useful for laying down and makingropes to assist inshipbuilding. These particular streets are known asropewalks, hence the area has since been styled as such.

In the 20th Century and present day, Ropewalks has evolved in to a cultural hub for independent shops, international restaurants, world food stores,bazaars, galleries and as a centre for nightlife.

Cultural venues in the area includeFACT Liverpool,Bluecoat Chambers,Epstein Theatre, and theChurch of St Luke (also known as the 'Bombed Out Church') at the top of Bold Street.Concert Square and surrounding Seel Street, Fleet Street and Slater Street form one of the most popular areas for Liverpool's nightlife.

In a 2019 survey, university students in the United Kingdom ranked two Liverpool universities amongst the top five for nightlife, with Concert Square being cited as a factor.[53][54][55][56]

Waterfront

[edit]
Liverpool Waterfront showing theRoyal Albert Dock in the forefront andPier Head in the distance

Liverpool's Waterfront lies adjacent to theRiver Mersey. The City Centre section stretches 3 miles (5 km) fromBramley-Moore Dock in the North toBrunswick Dock in the south.

Liverpool has the largest and most complete system of historic docks in the world[citation needed] and many buildings date back to when Liverpool was one of the world's most important ports at the centre of international trade.[57][58] In the 20th and 21st centuries, much of the docklands has been remodelled to incorporate a large amount of cultural establishments of national and international significance[59][60] includingBritish Music Experience,[61]The Beatles Story,[62]International Slavery Museum,[63]Museum of Liverpool[64] andTate Liverpool.[65]

Regeneration of the Waterfront is ongoing and as such, each dock is at a different stage of redevelopment. Some are presently underused or disused with a series of plans in the pipeline.

ACC Liverpool with theWheel of Liverpool
  • King's Dock

King's Dock is home to theACC Liverpool Arena, Convention Centre andExhibition Centre Liverpool complex. Surrounding them is theWheel of Liverpool as well as hotels, restaurants, bars and apartments. The future plan for King's Dock is to develop more leisure, hotel, residential and offices.[66]

  • Liverpool Marina

Liverpool Marina comprises 270berths onfloating timber pontoons across two docks. It accommodatesyachts,powerboats, canal boats,narrow boats,barges,ribs, especially those who cruise theIrish Sea to explore the Liverpool area,North Wales coast,Isle of Man, Ireland, Cumbria and Scotland. The Liverpool Yacht Club holds a series of races throughout the year.[67][68][69]

  • Liverpool Waters
Liverpool Waterfront showing the 'Three Graces'
The buildings ofPier Head from theAlbert Dock

Liverpool Waters is a 60 hectare (150 acre) section of the Liverpool Waterfront which encompassesPrinces Dock, Central Docks,Clarence Docks, the Northern Docks and King Edward Triangle.

At present the docks are the subject of a £5 billion regeneration project, said[who?] to be one of the largest in Europe. Spearheaded byThe Peel Group, the project seeks to revive the docks into a five neighbourhood mixed use city district for residential, business and leisure space.[70][71]

Prince's Dock, immediately to the north of thePier Head and Three Graces, is the home of theLiverpool Cruise Terminal whereturnaround cruises arrive and depart.

The newIsle of Man ferry terminal is set to open adjacent toWaterloo Dock in 2023.[needs update]

The new stadium forEverton FC with a 52,888 capacity is currently[when?] under construction atBramley-Moore Dock, as well as a new fan zone.[72]

  • Pier Head and Mann Island

Pier Head is one of Liverpool's most famous locations. It is home to the 'Three Graces' which have dominated the city's skyline for over a century (they are theRoyal Liver Building, theCunard Building and thePort of Liverpool Building). TheMemorial to the Engine Room Heroes of the Titanic is also sited here alongside theBritish Music Experience,Pier Head Ferry Terminal andQueensway Tunnel Ventilation Shaft. Pier Head is also often used to stage large scale public events. Pier Head is bordered to the north byPrince's Dock and to the south byMann Island. Mann Island is another section of the Liverpool waterfront which is the location of theMuseum of Liverpool,RIBA North and theLiverpool City Region Combined Authority andMayor of the Liverpool City Region's Office .[73][74]

  • Royal Albert Dock

Royal Albert Dock is dominated by a large selection of 19th century warehouses which now form the largest group ofGrade I listed buildings in Britain. They currently house theTate Liverpool,Merseyside Maritime Museum,International Slavery Museum,The Beatles Story, and various shops, bars, restaurants and cafes.[75][76][77]

Demography

[edit]
Ethnic breakdown in Liverpool city centre –
(UK Census 2021)[78][79]
Ethnic groupLiverpool
city centre
England
Population36,77056.5 million
White72.2%81.0%
Asian13.59%9.6%
Other5.61%2.2%
Mixed/Multiple4.99%3.0%
Black3.61%4.2%

Since the early 1990s, agencies within Liverpool (including the City Council) have been actively promoting city centre living. The city centre population has consistently grown from around 10,000 residents in 1991; 13,500 in 2001; 15,271 in 2006; 29,060 in 2016 to almost 40,000 residents in 2023. Although there are some differences in how sources define the city centre's boundaries.

The rapid increase in Liverpool city centre's population has occurred during periods where Liverpool's employment growth has outstripped national performance in England as a whole. A notable increase in the city centre's population took place in the decade between 2006 - 2016 when the population almost doubled. According to figures from theOffice for National Statistics, Liverpool had the fastest growing city centre in England between 2002 and 2015, where its population boom was exceptional even amongst the wider trend for city centre living across the entire country.

Various factors have been attributed to the significant increase in population. The reasons include the success of Liverpool city centre's economy, urban regeneration, a growth in new build apartments, student developments and the increasing appeal of the city's four universities, higher education establishments, cultural offerings and nightlife. A growing immigrant community and an increase in families from outside the UK has also contributed to the increase. More young professionals have also chosen to move to Liverpool city centre who have been encouraged by greater employment opportunities in thepublic sector, hotels, restaurants, banking and finance. Such an increase in jobs has in turn created a market for more restaurants, bars and shops.[80][81][82][83]

Headquarters and major offices

[edit]
See also:Category:Companies based in Liverpool,Category:Manufacturing companies based in Liverpool,Category:Organisations based in Liverpool,Category:Companies based in Merseyside, andCategory:Organisations based in Merseyside

Liverpool city centre contains a large amount of headquarters and major branch offices for companies and organisations who operate nationally and internationally. There are also many headquarters based in the wider city of Liverpool and Liverpool City Region.

Companies and organisations based in Liverpool city centre
Company or organisationType of baseIndustrySources
Appreciate Group plcHeadquartersRetail industry[84]
Arc Hospitality RecruitmentHeadquartersProfessional services[85]
Atlantic Container LineMajor branch officeFreight transport[86]
Avalanche Studios GroupMajor branch officeVideo game industry[87]
Beetham OrganizationHeadquartersReal estate business[88]
Bibby Financial ServicesHeadquartersFinancial services[89]
Bibby LineHeadquartersShipping[90]
BioGradHeadquartersHealthcare industry[91]
BoodlesHeadquartersJewellery[92]
Borchard Lines LtdMajor branch officeFreight transport[93]
BrabnersHeadquartersLaw[94]
British Board of AgrémentMajor branch officeConstruction industry[95]
British Oceanographic Data CentreHeadquartersOceanography[96]
Bullen HealthcareHeadquartersHealthcare industry[97]
CashplusMajor branch officeBank[98]
Chad Harrison InternationalHeadquartersProfessional services[99][100]
CMA CGMMajor branch officeFreight transport[101]
CorporéHeadquartersHealthcare industry[102]
CurtinsHeadquartersProfessional services[103]
Denholm Global LogisticsHeadquartersTransport industry[104]
Direct Line GroupMajor branch officeInsurance[105]
Disclosure and Barring ServiceMajor branch officeGovernment of the United Kingdom[106]
Ditto MusicHeadquartersMusic industry[107]
DLA PiperMajor branch officeLaw[108]
Downing GroupHeadquartersReal estate business,Construction industry[109]
DWF GroupMajor branch officeLaw[110]
Ernst & YoungMajor branch officeProfessional services[111]
European Registry of Hereditary Pancreatitis and Pancreatic CancerHeadquartersHealthcare industry[112]
Everton F.C.HeadquartersSport industry[113]
FirespriteHeadquartersVideo game industry[114]
Fisheries Society of the British IslesHeadquartersFishing industry[115]
Gaff and GoHeadquartersTransgenderLingerie[116]
Grosvenor GroupMajor branch officeReal estate business[117]
Hapag-LloydMajor branch officeFreight transport[118]
HE Simm GroupHeadquartersEngineering[119]
Henry Willis & SonsHeadquartersPipe organ builders[120]
Henty Oil LimitedHeadquartersPetroleum industry[121]
Hill DickinsonHeadquartersLaw[122]
HM Passport OfficeMajor branch officeGovernment of the United Kingdom[123]
HMS Eaglet, Naval Regional HeadquartersHeadquartersBritish Armed Forces[124]
Hobs ReprographicsHeadquartersReprography[125]
Hurricane FilmsHeadquartersFilm industry[126]
Independent Container LineHeadquarters of ICL UK Agencies LtdFreight transport[127]
Institute of Employment RightsHeadquartersThink tank[128]
International Cotton AssociationHeadquartersTrade association[129]
Investec Wealth & InvestmentMajor branch officeFinancial services, Bank,Wealth management[130]
Irish FerriesMajor branch officeTransport industry[131]
Jacaranda RecordsHeadquartersRecord shop[132]
John West FoodsHeadquartersFood industry[133]
LegacieHeadquartersReal estate business[134]
Lucid GamesHeadquartersVideo game industry[135]
Maersk LineMain UK officeFreight transport[136]
Mann Island FinanceHeadquartersFinancial services[137]
Marks & ClerkMajor branch officeIntellectual property[138]
Marshall Property Construction LtdHeadquartersConstruction industry[139][140]
McBurney TransportMajor branch officeTransport industry[141]
MedicashHeadquartersHealthcare industry[142]
Mediterranean Shipping CompanyMajor branch officeShipping[143]
Milk EducationHeadquartersEducation[144]
Mowgli Street FoodHeadquartersFood industry[145]
OriGymHeadquartersSport industry[146]
PCI Electrical & Control Services LimitedHeadquartersElectrical engineering[147]
Pershing LLCUK HeadquartersFinancial services[148]
Princes GroupHeadquartersFood industry[149]
Project Four SafetyHeadquartersConstruction industry[150]
PSS (UK)HeadquartersHealthcare industry[151]
Quilter CheviotMajor branch officeFinancial services[152]
RathbonesMajor branch officeFinancial services[153]
Real Good Food plcHeadquartersFood industry[154]
Regenda GroupHeadquartersHousing association,Construction industry[155]
Roy Castle Lung Cancer FoundationHeadquartersHealthcare industry[156]
Royal College of PhysiciansNorthern England HeadquartersHealthcare industry[157]
Royal Institute of British ArchitectsNorthern England HeadquartersProfessional association[158]
RSA Insurance GroupMajor branch officeInsurance[159]
S Norton and Co LimitedHeadquartersRecycling[160]
Sentric MusicHeadquartersMusic industry[161]
Shore CapitalMajor branch officeFinancial services[162]
Sime Darby Oils Liverpool Refinery LimitedHeadquartersFood industry[163]
Smurfit KappaUK HeadquartersPackaging[164]
Sony Interactive EntertainmentMajor branch officeVideo game industry[165]
SportPesaHeadquartersGambling industry[166]
Stadler Rail Service UK LimitedUK HeadquartersTransport industry[167]
Stanleybet InternationalHeadquartersGambling industry[168]
SunnyvaleHeadquartersHousing association[169]
Taylor WessingMajor branch officeLaw[170]
TCS Group InternationalHeadquartersFinancial services,Professional services, Law[171]
The Billington GroupHeadquartersFood industry[172]
The National Biofilms Innovation CentreMajor branch officeLife sciences industry[173]
The Pandemic InstituteHeadquartersHealthcare industry[174]
TorusHeadquartersHousing association[175]
Try & LillyHeadquartersTextile industry[176]
UK Visas and ImmigrationMajor branch officeGovernment of the United Kingdom[177]
Unite the UnionNorth West Regional OfficeTrade union[178]
Universities Superannuation SchemeHeadquartersPension[179]
VirtuopoHeadquartersEvent management[180]
Vitaflo International LtdHeadquartersHealthcare industry[181]
Wealth at WorkHeadquartersProfessional services,Financial services[182]
WeightmansHeadquartersLaw[183]
X1 DevelopmentsHeadquartersReal estate business[184]
Zim Integrated Shipping Services LtdUK HeadquartersShipping[185]

Architecture

[edit]
Main article:Architecture of Liverpool

RIBA North and their public gallery are situated on Mann Island.

Culture and tourism

[edit]
Grandmother giant at theRoyal de LuxeMemories of August 1914

As of 2019, Liverpool'stourism industry was worth nearly £5 billion per year and by 2022, annual visitor numbers in the City Centre reached approximately 80 million people.[186][187][188]

Liverpool is home to the largest number of museums and galleries outside of London and by 2022, it had more of the United Kingdom's most visited cultural institutions than any other city inNorthern England.[189][190]

In 2023, Liverpool hosted theEurovision Song Contest on behalf ofUkraine. It is estimated that the event would bring an extra 100,000 tourists to the city.[191]

In 2008, Liverpool was theEuropean Capital of Culture, the first city in England to be awarded the title.[192]

The large programme of events was a catalyst for economic investment and acted as a springboard to redevelop the city, renovate important cultural buildings, bolster Liverpool's reputation as an international cultural destination and increase tourism. 2008 saw large scale regeneration with the completion of numeroustall buildings in the Commercial District as well as the opening ofLiverpool One, theLiverpool Arena andLiverpool Cruise Terminal.[193]

As well as its designation as aEuropean Capital of Culture andEurovision Song Contest host city, Liverpool has hosted many events of international significance including theMTV Europe Music Awards 2008,Music of Black Origin Awards,Royal de Luxe,2022 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships andTurner Prize.

Nightlife

[edit]
Liverpool'sRadio City Tower at night

Liverpool'snightlife includes restaurants, bars, nightclubs and music venues who cater for a late night audience.

There are a number of different areas within the city centre that include large concentrations of bars, pubs and nightclubs. They include:Baltic Triangle, Castle Street with a collection of modern cocktail bars,Hardman Street,Mathew Street,Pride Quarter,Ropewalks (includingConcert Square and Seel Street) andRoyal Albert Dock.[194][195]

Numerous exclusive bars can be found around the Royal Albert Dock and Pier Head,[196] whilst Concert Square is a more popular destination for students and young adults.[197] The Cavern Club, which was made famous by The Beatles, is situated in the 'Cavern Quarter' in and around Mathew Street.

A large number ofLGBT-friendly bars can be found in thePride Quarter, which has been widely acknowledged as one of the most notable and visited destinations in the UK forLGBT nightlife.[198][199][200]

In the decade 2012 – 2022, the number of employees in Liverpool's night time industries has risen and by 2022, the city employed 125,889 people in thenight time economy. This represents 24% of thecity proper population and 48% of employment in Liverpool as a whole. Sectors with the highest proportion of night time workers include accommodation, food and drink.

Data from the Liverpool BID Company showed that in 2022, 6pm had the highest hourly footfall in the City Centre, Saturday was the highest day of the week for footfall and October was the highest month of the year for footfall. The data was tracked using cameras throughout the City Centre to track the movement of people between 6 pm and 6 am.[201][202][203]

Liverpool has been awarded the Purple Flag every year since 2010 which is an international award to towns and cities who achieve high standards of excellence in managing the evening and night time economy. Liverpool has received praise for its impressive use of outdoor space, the provision of safe spaces and crime initiatives.[204][205][206]

Transport

[edit]
Merseyrail train which connects Liverpool city centre to its metropolitan area

Liverpool city centre has a transport network that is connected locally, nationally, and internationally by road, rail and sea.

Rail

[edit]

Liverpool Lime Street railway station is themainline railway terminus in Liverpool city centre and is one of the top ten most used train stations in Great Britain outside London.[207] The station provides direct connections to numerous British cities including London,Birmingham, Manchester,Leeds,Sheffield,Nottingham,Newcastle,Norwich andHull.[208]

Liverpool is home toMerseyrail. It connects Liverpool city centre with the surroundingLiverpool City Region.[209][210]

There are four stations in the city centre:

Sandhills station serves the northern fringe of the city centre whilstBrunswick serves the Southern fringe. There is a new station planned to serve the Baltic Triangle area of the city centre.[215]

Liverpool Central station andMoorfields station have platforms that serve both the MerseyrailNorthern andWirral lines, while Lime Street underground andJames Street station are located on the Wirral line. The Lime Street mainline station also provides local services on the MerseyrailCity line.

Over three and a quarter miles of disused rail tunnels lie under the city centre,Wapping Tunnel andWaterloo Tunnel/Victoria Tunnel.

Road

[edit]

Numerous A roads lead into Liverpool city centre including theA5036, A5047, A5052, A5053,A562,A565,A580 and theA59. TheKingsway Tunnel andQueensway Tunnel, which are both toll roads, run under theRiver Mersey connecting Liverpool city centre toWallasey andBirkenhead respectively.

  • Canning Place bus station for South of the City
    Canning Place bus station for South of the City
  • Queen Square bus station for North of the City and crossriver
    Queen Square bus station for North of the City and crossriver
  • Arriva Crossriver buses
    Arriva Crossriver buses
  • City Sightseeing
    City Sightseeing
  • City Explorer
    City Explorer
  • Magical Mystery Tour
  • VOI escooters
    VOI escooters
  • Merseyrail
    Merseyrail

Bus and Coach

[edit]

There are numerous bus stops and stations across Liverpool city centre, however, the main interchanges areQueen Square bus station andLiverpool One bus station which are managed byMerseytravel. They are served primarily byArriva North West andStagecoach Merseyside. There are services to all corners of the city and as far afield asChester andPreston.National Express coaches serve destinations around the UK and stop at the Liverpool One bus station.

Liverpool City Explorer, Liverpool FC Explorer and Beatles Liverpool Explorer by Maghull Coaches offeropen top tours of the city by double decker bus.[216]

Cycling

[edit]

National Cycle Route 56 and National Cycle Route 810 passes through Liverpool city centre.[217]

Maritime transport

[edit]
  • Mersey Ferry Royal Daffodil
    Mersey Ferry Royal Daffodil
  • Liverpool Cruise Terminal
    Liverpool Cruise Terminal
  • Leeds and Liverpool Canal Liverpool Canal Link
    Leeds and Liverpool Canal Liverpool Canal Link
  • Isle of Man Steam Packet Manannan
    Isle of Man Steam Packet Manannan
  • Isle of Man Steam Packet route map
    Isle of Man Steam Packet route map
Pier Head Ferry Terminal andLiverpool Canal Link,Leeds and Liverpool Canal

Maritime transport connects Liverpool city centre directly with the rest of the United Kingdom, theIsle of Man, Ireland and around the world.

Daily ferry crossings operate between Liverpool andDublin and vessels transport both passengers andcargo. Ferries from Liverpool toBelfast, Northern Ireland, depart from The Stena Line Liverpool Port atTwelve Quays terminal,Birkenhead.[218]

Direct ferries between Liverpool city centre and the Isle of Man are provided by theIsle of Man Steam Packet Company and operate during the summer season from a terminal on Triskelion Way since 2024.[219][220]

TheMersey Ferry operates regular crossings between the Pier Head and theWirral Peninsula for commuters, tourists and special events. Ferry trips are also provided from Liverpool city centre to theManchester Ship Canal.[221]

Leeds and Liverpool Canal runs directly into Liverpool city centre via theLiverpool Canal Link at Pier Head. This enables boats to sail directly in to central Liverpool from around the UK.[222]

Liverpool Cruise Terminal, adjacent to the Pier Head, serves long-distance passenger cruises to destinations such as France, Spain, Norway, Sweden, Iceland, Germany, Netherlands, Finland and Russia. It is served byFred. Olsen Cruise Lines,Ambassador Cruise Line and others.[223]

Liverpool Marina allows yachts, powerboats, canal boats, narrow boats, barges and rigid inflatable boats from around the UK and the world to arrive directly in to central Liverpool.[224]

Other

[edit]

The only major forms of transport not readily available in Liverpool city centre are via trams and air, although trains and buses link Liverpool city centre toLiverpool John Lennon Airport inSpeke.

History

[edit]

Five stations on theLiverpool Overhead Railway were in Liverpool city centre (Pier Head connecting toLiverpool Tramways Company main hub,James St,Customs House/Canning andWapping Dock) from 1893 until the line's closure in 1956. On what is now the Northern Line,Liverpool St James railway station was also open until 1917 andCrown Street railway station until 1972.Liverpool Exchange was replaced by Moorfields.

Universities and colleges

[edit]
University of Liverpool campus at dusk

Liverpool city centre contains the campuses of four universities and a significant number of higher education providers offering studentsdegree level courses.[225][226]

The four city centre based universities are:

Higher education providers include:

Combined, they have a student population of somewhere between 60,000 – 70,000 as of 2023. A large number of these students live in accommodation in the City Centre.[238][239]

The University of Liverpool is largely sited aroundMount Pleasant. Some of the buildings possessed by the University of Liverpool in Liverpool city centre include theHarold Cohen Library, theLiverpool Guild of Students and theVictoria Building. Liverpool John Moores University has two campuses in Liverpool city centre, one at Byrom Street and one at Mount Pleasant also.

The Liverpool Business School, andJohn Moores Students' Union are part of LJMU.

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