A Walk around
Salford Quays 24/08/08
With its new canalside docks, the city of
Salford, a prominent site of the
Industrial Revolution in the early
19th century, was destined to grow rapidly. In 1896,
Trafford Park Industrial Estate was opened for the manufacture and export of textiles and machinery and the whole area boomed. At its mid-20th century peak, Trafford Park employed 75,
000 workers. Salford veterans recall thousands upon thousands of men and women streaming into its factories every day. Salford had experienced a major increase in population, from 7,000 to
220,000 by the early years of the
20th century, but even amid enormous wealth creation and with a massive labour force in work, social and economic conditions were often appalling.
In common with the area's other traditional industries such as engineering and steel-making, Salford's docks suffered terrible decline at the end of the
1960s. The advent of containerisation, shifts in trade patterns and the increase in the size of ships all affected Salford badly. The glory days were over and worsening economic conditions, precipitated by the oil crisis of
1973 and subsequent industrial unrest in
Britain, speeded up the rate of decline. By the late
1970s, the loss of trade and jobs in the north of
England was alarming and the once-proud docks of inner Salford, by now squalid and polluted, qualified to receive derelict land funding under the
British Government's
Urban Programme.
Salford docks closed forever in
1982.
Jobs at Trafford Park nose-dived towards an all-time low of 24,
500 by
1985, as unemployment in the north-west soared above 30 per cent in some places.
Salford City Council chief executive
John Willis, who had joined the council in 1966, recalled how bad things were at the time: "All the traditional industries were shutting and we faced this urban wasteland right in the middle of the city. Unlike
Liverpool or
London, the docks didn't have good warehouse buildings that could in time be renovated. They were rotting wooden grain stores. The challenge was what to do with the docks and the
Council took the view that it had to do something. And that meant partnership with the private sector."
The City Council had already been brave in selling off Salford's worst tenement blocks to private housebuilders for nominal sums to redevelop as owner-occupier flats. Now it persuaded the
Department of the Environment to allow it to purchase the docks and engage private entrepreneurs and developers in a phased programme of dockland regeneration. In late
1983 it acquired the majority of the docks (about 90 hectares) from the
Manchester Ship Canal Company for a reputed  £1.5 million. It then reached agreement with private developer Ted
Hagen's Urban
Waterside company to transfer land around
Dock 6 to its ownership on condition that at least £
4.5 million of private sector development be secured.
Meanwhile, derelict land funding from the Urban Programme enabled work to start on reclamation as well as new services, landscaping and roads.
Hagen's vision was for a cinema and hotel to occupy the site. Salford was about to begin the long march back from the brink. "At the
City Council, we had sleepless nights over the guarantees we had to give but they were never called on," said
Willis. "
Investment from the
Government's Urban Programme, from the
European Regional Fund and our own budget meant we were eventually able to start sorting out the infrastructure."
Extracts from Making the
Lowry,
Jeremy Myerson, Lowry
Press,
2000
Support was received from
The National Lottery, through The
Arts Council of England,
The Millennium Commission, and
Heritage Lottery Fund. Other funders include the
European Regional Development Fund,
English Partnerships, Salford City Council,
Trafford Park Development Corporation and the private sector.
The total cost of the project was  £106 million.
The project includes The Lowry building, the large
Plaza, the terraced areas down to the canal and the Lifting Footbridge leading to
Trafford Wharfside and the
Imperial War Museum North. Also included in The Lowry project is the
Digital World Centre (
DWC) - a high-tech business centre providing quality, serviced premises. It will be home to the Digital World
Society (
DWS), a new think tank that will generate innovative projects in digital technologies.
All Photos taken by Tricia
The first four are at the
University of Salford
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- published: 30 Sep 2008
- views: 8826