Highcross Leicester

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Highcross Leicester
Highcross Leicester logo.jpeg
Location Leicester
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Address 5 Shires Lane, Leicester, LE1 4AN
Opening date 1991 (extension opened 4 September 2008)
Developer Hammerson
Hermes Real Estate
Architect Foreign Office Architects (Highcross extension)
No. of stores and services 135
No. of anchor tenants 3 (John Lewis, Debenhams and House of Fraser)
Total retail floor area 110,000 m2 (1,184,040 ft2)
No. of floors 2
Parking 3000 Spaces
Website http://www.highcrossleicester.com/
The interior of part of the covered extension

Highcross Leicester is a shopping centre in Leicester, England. It was opened as The Shires in 1991 to supplement the ageing and run-down Haymarket Shopping Centre, also since re-developed. It was built on a central location within the city centre on Eastgates and High Street. Frontages of buildings that were demolished were retained and new external construction was in a mock-olde style. An extension opened in 1994, with a frontage on to Church Gate. A further large extension opened in 2008, when the entire centre was renamed Highcross Leicester. Highcross Leicester contains over 120 shops, with a range of both large and smaller units, including branches of the department stores House of Fraser, Debenhams and John Lewis. There are also 15 restaurants and cafés, a cinema and two large car parks.

The Shires becomes Highcross Leicester

The most recent extension, known as Shires West during the planning and early construction phases, doubles the retail space available. This extension lies between the former Shires and the inner ring-road. It includes a John Lewis department store (no connection with Lewis's that was opened on Humberstone Gate in 1936 and closed in the early 1990s) and a Cinema de Lux, the only multiplex cinema in the city centre. There are also two new public squares, residential apartments, a bus interchange and a further 2000-space car park on the opposite side of the ring road, linked by a glass footbridge, which replaces one of the earlier Shires car parks that was demolished to make way for the new extension. Other new tenants include designer fashion brands G-star, Lacoste, Hugo Boss and Zara, and there is also an Apple Store . Thirteen new restaurants and cafés signed up to open in the new centre. [1] The extension makes Highcross Leicester the largest shopping centre in the East Midlands.

The multiplex cinema and John Lewis parts of the centre mark the UK début of architecture firm Foreign Office Architects. The cinema is covered in a slightly buckled, stainless steel cladding, while the department store features two layers of glass, each with a swirling fabric design from John Lewis's archives, allowing light in and a view out, but obscuring the interior from the outside. The use of a fabric pattern recognises Leicester's past as a textile-producing city. [2]

An open day was held on Sunday, 1 June 2008 to show the people around the new development. More than a thousand people attended. The newly extended and refurbished shopping centre opened to the public on 4 September 2008 with over 125,000 visitors and over a million visitors in its first two weeks. The new extension cost £350 million to construct and has been the largest regeneration project in the city for many years. [3]

Naming controversies

On 14 July 2006, it was announced that the entire centre would be renamed the Highcross Quarter, relating to a Highcross that used to stand in what is now Highcross Street.[4] This received a mixed reaction, with criticism directed in particular at the use of the word "quarter" as opposed to "centre". [5]

On 19 July 2007, the principal owners of the development, Hammerson, announced that they had decided to change the new name for the centre to Highcross Leicester. [6] On 23 July 2007, the Leicester Mercury reported that the latest name change had been the result of a year-long dispute [7] with a local coven of witches, who pointed out that "High Cross Quarter" is the name of a high point or major sabbat in the wiccan calendar, and registered five [8] internet domain names relating to the name. Hammerson refused to comment on the dispute, and claimed that the name change was to "give it a stronger identity for customers and raise the profile not only of the development but also the city." [9]

The Daily Telegraph reported on 25 July 2007 that the Highcross Leicester developers had their offer to buy the domain names rejected. [10] Despite Hammerson saying they were no longer interested in the highcrossquarter domain names for the renamed Highcross Leicester development as the name had now "evolved", the Telegraph reported that Hammerson had escalated the matter all the way to the World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO) in Geneva where it was seeking a ruling on ownership of the highcrossquarter.com domain name. On 30 August 2007, the WIPO ruled against Hammerson's complaint. [11]

See also

References

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  11. Shires (GP) Limited v. Mel Gordon (Leics Techs), Case No. D2007-0866, WIPO

External links