*** Welcome to piglix ***

Merry Hill Shopping Centre

Intu Merry Hill
Merry Hill Shopping Centre, Brierley Hill - geograph.org.uk - 1513405.jpg
Location

Brierley Hill, Dudley, West Midlands, DY5 1QX,

England
Coordinates 52°28′53.4″N 2°6′39.4″W / 52.481500°N 2.110944°W / 52.481500; -2.110944Coordinates: 52°28′53.4″N 2°6′39.4″W / 52.481500°N 2.110944°W / 52.481500; -2.110944
Opening date 1985
Developer Richardson Developments
Management Julian Wilkinson (Intu)
Owner Intu Properties
No. of stores and services 210
No. of anchor tenants 5 (Debenhams, Marks & Spencer, Primark, Asda and Next)
Total retail floor area 154,002m² (1.593m ft²)
No. of floors 2 (Some shops have extra floors)
Website intu.co.uk/merryhill
Merry Hill Monorail
(1991-1996)
Round Oak(South Staffordshire Line) - Proposed Metro link
Waterfront West(planned extension)
Dudley Canal N° 1.
Waterfront East
Maintenance Depot
Grand Central
Times Square(for Merry Hill Bus Station)
Boulevard

Brierley Hill, Dudley, West Midlands, DY5 1QX,

Intu Merry Hill is a shopping centre in Brierley Hill near Dudley, West Midlands, England. It was developed between 1985 and 1990, with several expansion and renovation projects taking place since. The original developers and owners were Richardson Developments but the Centre has had a number of other owners including Chelsfield and Mountleigh. The current owners are Intu Properties. It was built by Tarmac Construction.

Intu Merry Hill is home to over 250 shops, retail park, cinema and an Eat Central food hall including Pizza Express and Nandos with ten thousand car parking spaces. Adjacent to the main shopping site is The Waterfront, which accommodates offices for HM Revenue and Customs amongst others, and has a marina area providing space for a number of bars and restaurants.

In June 2016 Intu Properties acquired the remaining 50 percent of the Merry Hill estate for £410 million, from the Queensland Investment Corporation before expenses.

The Dudley No.1 Canal passes though the adjacent Waterfront site and high above the edge of the shopping centre, before descending Delph Locks.

In the 1980s, the Government created a number of enterprise zones which gave incentives to firms wishing to set up business in areas which had been affected by a downturn in the manufacturing industry. The Brierley Hill area had suffered the loss of the Round Oak Steelworks, and it was hoped that other manufacturers could be encouraged to move into the area. Incentives included relaxed planning rules and a ten-year period exempt from business rates. Developers saw the opportunity to take advantage of lack of restrictions by making a shopping centre, rather than industrial units originally envisaged as the mainstay of the Enterprise Zone.


...
Wikipedia

...