Piccadilly Plaza

The true brutalist qualities of Piccadilly Plaza are slowly disappearing under new additions and amendments to the existing buildings; the most marked was the demolition of Bernard House, the smallest of the three towers that sat above the podium element. Bernard House provided a striking silhouette by virtue of its twin parabolic roof of timber construction. The timber had suffered over time due to lack of maintenance of the 1960s single ply roofing membrane. The scheme on completion contained a hotel, offices, car park, nightclub, public house and a two-storey shopping centre. It was originally marketed as a ‘hotel in space’. Its commercial success as a mixed-use building has been acceptable, but the environment around the base was not always the most convivial during the less prosperous times of the city. The area around the Plaza remains quite stark and utilitarian, not aided, in the opinion of some, by Tadao Ando’s contribution to the city’s public space, a curved concrete pavilion; however, it is a bus station. Brutalist buildings are increasingly rare, and, with the steady disappearance of this period of publicly hated structures, the alterations may seem all the more regretful in retrospect; though recent refurbishment work by Stephenson Bell has been closer in manner to the spirit of the Covell Matthews’ development. The integration of the ground floor commercial uses into the street scene may ultimately prove more successful than the original, particularly to (New) York Street at the rear.
- OS grid ref
- SJ843982
- Easting
- 384285
- Northing
- 398179
- Postcode
- M1 4BT
Piccadilly Plaza gallery

Textured tower. Cast panels designed by William Mitchell.
Source: Author's own

Construction of cantilevered hotel deck.
Source: MMU Visual Resources Centre

Hotel tower under construction. View from Portland Street.
Source: MMU Visual Resources Centre

Tower, near completion. View from Chorlton Street.
Source: MMU Visual Resources Centre

Hotel in Space. Brochure cover.
Source: Salford Local History Library

Sectional elevation. Bernard House (demolished).
Source: GMCRO

Plaza. View from Portland Street.
Source: Author's own

Model.
Source:

Model.
Source:

Architect's perspective sketch.
Source:

Construction. St. Andrew's House in background.
Source: Author's scan from private collection

Elevation.
Source: Author's photo from drawings held on site. Courtesy Bruntwood.

Aerial photo. Bernard House in foreground.
Source: Author's scan from private collection

View from (New) York Street. 1993
Source: Author's scan from private collection

Bernard House.
Source: Author's scan from private collection

Press photograph, 1967.
Source: Private collection

Purple day.
Source: Author's photograph, November 2018
References
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Builder
pp.895-900
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Architect & Building News
pp.913-916