Surrey Quays Shopping Centre

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Surrey Quays Shopping
Surrey Quays Shopping logo
LocationLondon
AddressSurrey Quays, Redriff Road
Opening dateJuly 1988; 33 years ago (1988-07)[1]
ManagementSurrey Quays Limited [2]
OwnerBritish Land[3]
No. of stores and services43
Total retail floor area309,000 square feet (28,700 m2)[2]
No. of floors2
Parking1,300 [4]
Public transit accessCanada Water station
Surrey Quays station
Websitesurreyquays.co.uk

Surrey Quays Shopping & Leisure is located in Rotherhithe, London. It is currently owned by British Land.

The shopping centre opened in July 1988 following years of development by the London Docklands Development Corporation in the London Docklands and surrounding areas. Surrey Quays Shopping has over 40 stores including Tesco, 1,300 parking spaces and a food court.

Improvements in the local transport links and rise in local housing developments in recent years have given local consumers easier access to the retail area.

In August 2019 British Land announced plans to demolish the shopping centre to make way for new stores, green spaces and housing. These plans were approved in October 2019. Works are due to start in 2022.

History[]

The site on which the destination is built was originally a dock. However, as the majority of Surrey Docks ship yards closed in the early 1970s, due to a general decline, the land was left abandoned and the docks filled in.[5] It was not until the London Docklands Development Corporation began to redevelop the area that the land found a new lease of life. See Surrey Commercial Docks

Construction of Surrey Quays Shopping began in late 1985, and was completed in time for a July 1988 opening. At the same time new housing was being constructed in the surrounding area which ensured a steady influx of customers.

The area is still referred to as Surrey Docks by many of the local residents and the old name can still be seen on a few road signs in the area.

In 1998 a leisure park was opened adjacent to the area, facilities include an Odeon (UCI at the time) Cinema, Hollywood Bowl, and a number of restaurants.[6]

Present day[]

The dolphin sculpture and fountain prior to removal. Main concourse area.

Surrey Quays Shopping has not changed much from its original construction. An extension was added to the Tesco store in 2008, and a fountain which used to lie in the main concourse of the area featuring a Dolphin sculpture by David Backhouse was removed in the early 2000s to make way for a new seating and sale area.[7]

Transport[]

Surrey Quays Shopping is in close proximity to Canada Water Underground station which serves the Jubilee line and London Overground's East London Line. Canada Water also has a bus station which allows access to a number of London bus routes. It has its own bus stops and most local bus routes stop here either before or after serving Canada Water.

Surrey Quays Station is also close by which serves London Overground's East London Line.

The shopping area has a mini cab rank and a large car park.

Redevelopment[]

An impression of the old redevelopment plans. - 2012 Design

In 2013, British Land bought out Tesco's 50% stake in Surrey Quays. (It was originally owned by British Land and Tesco)

British Land in a joint venture with Tesco (Surrey Quays Limited) plans to redevelop it over the next few years. The plan is to have a 100,000 sq ft extension built, while the existing infrastructure will undergo a major refurbishment. The surrounding area and its facade will also be significantly improved, including new public spaces, easy routes to transport links and larger parking areas. The nearby leisure park will also be included in these works as will the shop fronts along the river featuring the Decathlon stores.[8]

In October 2019 plans were approved for a new town centre on the Surrey Quays Shopping Centre site, resulting in the existing shopping centre being demolished and no longer being redeveloped as previously planned. The new plans include new green spaces, 3000 new homes and over 16 new streets. The project will cost over £4 billion with the site on completion being over 53 acres in size. Works are due to start in 2022.[9]

References[]

  1. ^ "LDDC Completion Booklet". London Docklands Development Corporation. 20 December 1996.
  2. ^ a b "£30m Investment in Surrey Quays Shopping Centre Given the Go Ahead". Archived from the original on 14 June 2014. Retrieved 21 June 2014.
  3. ^ "British Land full ownership of Surrey Quays". Evening Standard. Retrieved 4 April 2013.
  4. ^ "What are the centre car park opening hours?". Surreyquaysshoppingcentre.co.uk. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  5. ^ "LDDC Completion Booklet - Surrey Docks". Lddc-history.org.uk. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  6. ^ the url, surrey quays. "Surrey Quays - Home". Surrey-quays.co.uk. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  7. ^ "Bronze Sculpture:- By Oscar Nemon". Tedknell.co.uk. Retrieved 29 November 2014.
  8. ^ "British Land to start on £38m Surrey Quays refurb". Constructionenquirer.com. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  9. ^ "Canada Water: £4billion masterplan for new town centre in Docklands neighbourhood gets go-ahead". standard.co.uk. Retrieved 19 February 2021.

External links[]

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