TAK Supermarket Liverpool, United Kingdom.
Description
Liverpool Docks Drive, Virtual Tour, England, UK ????????
Starting at the Royal Albert Docks
Towards Kensington
Toxteth
Wavertree
CALDERSTONES PARK, Liverpool, England...
My Bike Rides Around Liverpool.....
WAR BUNKER (Wavertree, Liverpool, UK)
Abandoned World War 2 Bunker/Air Raid shelter located in Wavertree, Liverpool, UK.
Photography, slideshow and music produced by Edward McCormack for Eyedear Productions 2018.
Wavertree Botanic Park, Liverpool, England...
My Bike Rides Around Liverpool And Beyond.....
Old Photographs of Liverpool - Liverpool 15
From the website
Modern day images
or
Smithdown Road to Sefton Park, Liverpool, England...
My Bike Rides Around Liverpool.....
Picton Room????????????????????Central Library???? Liverpool,England???? 04/09/19
The Silent Disco????????was a one-off for Light Night,so I thought I'd STILL share this beautiful room with you.Hope you enjoy it.,????????????
Liverpool’s Hilton hotel @Chef_JasonLeeMarsh
Singing I’m a barbie girl, to get through a tough shift... ????????
Liverpool to Manchester via Chat Moss.
Chat Moss to Lime Street revisited with captions. An updated version with information about the difficulties faced by George Stephenson when building the line. Also, a bonus trip from Manchester Airport to Ardwick Depot via Phillips park. A quick trip around the city with a set of empties for the depot.
Liverpool One Apartments, Liverpool, UK
Stunning new development of graduate style accommodation, perfectly situated in the very heart of Liverpool city centre, just 50 metres from the new £920m Liverpool One retail development.
For Scousers abroad. I was on Walton Road County Road????
Kevs cab Liverpool
A Walk Around Liverpool Lime Street Railway Station, Liverpool, England
Liverpool Lime Street is a terminus railway station, and the main station serving the city centre of Liverpool. A large building resembling a Château fronts the station. A branch of the West Coast Main Line from London Euston terminates at the station, as well as TransPennine Express trains and other train services. The underground Lime Street Wirral Line station of the Merseyrail network is accessed via the main terminus. Lime Street is the largest and oldest railway station in Liverpool, and is one of 19 stations managed by Network Rail.
The original terminus of the 1830 Liverpool and Manchester Railway (L&MR) was located at Crown Street, in Edge Hill, to the east and outside the city centre. Construction of a purpose-built station at Lime Street in the city centre began in October 1833, the land being purchased from Liverpool Corporation for £9,000. A tunnel was constructed between Edge Hill and the new station prior to station construction in 1832. The architecture was designed by Cunningham and Holme,[2] and the station was opened to the public in August 1836, although construction was not completed until the following year. Because of the steep incline between Lime Street and Edge Hill, trains were stopped at Edge Hill, their locomotives removed, and the passenger carriages taken down by gravity, with the descent controlled by brakemen. The return journey was achieved by using a stationary engine to haul the carriages up to Edge Hill by rope.
Within six years, the rapid growth of the railways entailed expansion of the original station. A plan was made to erect an iron roof similar to that found at Euston station in London, ridge roofs supported by iron columns; however, Richard Turner and William Fairburn submitted a design for a single curved roof, which won the approval of the station committee. The work cost £15,000, and was completed in 1849.
In 1867 further expansion was needed and included the present northern arched train shed. With a span of 200 feet (61 m), it was the largest in the world at the time. It was also the first train shed in which iron was used throughout. A second parallel southern train shed was completed in 1879 being notable in being of dry construction with each bay taking only three days to construct.
The station is fronted by a large building in the style of a French château, the former North Western Hotel. Designed by Alfred Waterhouse, the building was built in 1879 at the same time as the second train shed and is now accommodation for students of Liverpool John Moores University.
A new ticket hall and office complex, which masked the views of the arches, were constructed in 2001. They were demolished as part of a comprehensive refurbishment completed in 2010.
In 1845 the L&MR was absorbed by its principal business partner, the Grand Junction Railway (GJR); the following year the GJR became part of the London and North Western Railway. At 'the grouping' in 1923, the station passed to the ownership of the London, Midland and Scottish (LMS) railway, and in 1948, the London Midland Region of British Railways. The station was one of the first to send mail by train.
Lime Street station was part of the first stage of electrification of the West Coast Main Line in 1959. In 1966, the station saw the launch of the first InterCity service.
With the creation of Merseyrail urban rail network in the 1970s, four terminus stations were demolished in Liverpool and Birkenhead centres, leaving only Lime Street terminus as a central point to serve the whole region for medium- and long-haul routes. The Merseyrail network gave ease of access for the whole Merseyside region to the one remaining large terminus.
Lime Street was voted Station of the Year 2010 at the National Rail Awards
Boarded-up Houses - Liverpool, 2016
here is a link to the corresponding photo series:
In Europe today there are around 11 million empty and unoccupied homes, of which 610,000 are in England. Large scale vacancy in cities is often a sign of great upheaval within the urban space.
Focusing on typical Victorian working class terraced houses in post-industrial Liverpool and Manchester, the project highlights the sheer volume of long-term vacancies in the UK to create a critical reflection about the extensive amount of unoccupied homes in England as well as in Europe in relation to the social housing market. When before, these historical houses symbolized the collective past of a flourishing industry and a strong working class and community, nowadays in some former industrial cities many hundreds of houses in fairly good conditions stand abandoned and boarded-up awaiting demolition.
LIVERPOOL LIME STREET TRAIN STATION @ Harthys ..Visit United Kingdom ( London )
ARWEN ERGOMETER - ( Specialized for the Heart Muscles) Stress Test Machine for the Electronic Millenium
The Cavern Club, Liverpool, England, United Kingdom, Europe
The Cavern Club is a nightclub in Liverpool, England. Opened on Wednesday 16 January 1957, the club had its first performance by The Beatles on 9 February 1961; Brian Epstein first saw them perform there on 9 November 1961. Alan Sytner opened the club, having been inspired by the jazz district in Paris, where there were a number of clubs in cellars. Sytner returned to Liverpool and wanted to open a club similar to Le Caveau in Paris. He eventually found a perfect cellar for his club which had been used as an air raid shelter during the war and opened it on 16 January 1957. The first act to open the club was the Merseysippi Jazz Band. What started as a jazz club eventually became a hangout for skiffle groups. Whilst playing golf with Sytner's father, Dr. Joseph Sytner, Nigel Walley who had left school at 15 to become an apprentice golf professional at the Lee Park Golf Club asked Dr. Sytner if his son could book The Quarrymen at The Cavern, which was one of three jazz clubs he managed. Dr. Sytner suggested that the band should play at the golf club first, so as to assess their talent, which they did. Sytner phoned Walley a week later and offered the band an interlude spot playing skiffle between the performances of two jazz bands at The Cavern, on Wednesday, 7 August 1957. Before the performance, the Quarrymen argued amongst themselves about the set list, as rock 'n roll songs were definitely not allowed at the club, but skiffle was tolerated. After beginning with a skiffle song, John Lennon called for the others to start playing Don't Be Cruel. Davis warned Lennon that the audience would eat you alive, but Lennon ignored this and started playing the song himself, forcing the others to join in. Halfway through, Sytner pushed his way through the audience and handed Lennon a note which read, Cut out the bloody rock 'n roll. The Quarrymen played at The Cavern again on 24 January 1958, which was Paul McCartney's first appearance there. (George Harrison first played there at a lunchtime session on 9 February 1961). Sytner ended up selling the Cavern Club to Ray McFall in 1959, after moving to London. Blues bands and Beat groups began to appear at the club on a regular basis in the early 1960s. The first Beat night was held on 25 May 1960 and featured a performance by Rory Storm and the Hurricanes (which included Ringo Starr as drummer). By early 1961, Bob Wooler had become the full-time compère and organiser of the lunchtime sessions. The Beatles made their first lunchtime appearance at the club on Tuesday 9 February 1961. They had returned to Liverpool from Hamburg, Germany, where they had been playing at the Indra and the Kaiserkeller. Their stage show had been through a lot of changes and some in the audience thought they were watching a German band. From 1961 to 1963 The Beatles made 292 appearances at the club, with their last occurring on 3 August 1963, a month after the band recorded She Loves You and just six months before the Beatles' first trip to the U.S.[citation needed] At the time, Brian Epstein promised the club's owners that the Beatles would return someday, but it was a promise that was never fulfilled.[citation needed] By this time, Beatlemania was sprouting across England, and the small club could no longer satisfy audience demand for the group. During 1962, The Hollies took The Beatles' slot at the Cavern Club. The Beatles had graduated from the club and had been signed to EMI's Parlophone label by producer George Martin. The amount of musical activity in Liverpool and Manchester caused record producers who had previously never ventured very far from London to start looking to the north. In the decade that followed, a wide variety of popular acts appeared at the club, including The Rolling Stones, The Yardbirds, The Kinks, Elton John, Queen, The Who and John Lee Hooker. Future star Cilla Black worked as the hat-check girl there. A recording studio, Cavern Sound opened in the basement of an adjoining building, run by Nigel Greenberg and Peter Hepworth. The club closed in March 1973, and was filled in during construction work on the Merseyrail underground rail loop. Jan Akkerman with Dutch group Focus were the last to play The Cavern, a few days before the club was shut down in May 1973. In April 1984 the club was taken over by Liverpool F.C. player Tommy Smith in association with Royal Life. Occupying 75% of the original site, it was re-built with many of the original bricks. The new design was to resemble the original as closely as possible. This was a difficult period of massive economic and political change in and around Liverpool and the club only survived until 1989, when it came under financial pressures and closed for 18 months. In 1991, two friends schoolteacher Bill Heckle and taxi driver Dave Jones reopened The Cavern. They still run the club today and are now the longest-running owners in its history.
Today’s video for Scousers abroad. I was on Picton Road Wavertree????
Kevs cab Liverpool
Gangs Of Britain Liverpool Documentary Real Stories HD
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Gang-related organised crime in the United Kingdom is concentrated around the cities of London, Manchester and Liverpool and regionally across the West .
full documentary, Inside: LA Gang Wars (Crips & Bloods) Inside: LA Gang Wars is an honest, first-person account of the lives of young gang members caught up .
Worst Prisons In United Kingdom ; Gang-related organised crime in the United Kingdom is concentrated around the cities of London, Manchester and Liverpool .
England Gangs Liverpool [The Red Flag] The Most Criminal City In UK Crime Documentary
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Who is he then? If you were to speak of The Devil in the late 80s and early 90s, the name of Stephen French would ripple through Liverpool's underworld.