City Sentral
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| Location | Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, England |
|---|---|
| Opening date | Cancelled |
| Developer | Realis Estates |
| Total retail floor area | 60,387 m2 (650,000 sq ft) |
| No. of floors | 3 |
| Parking | 1,000 |
| Website | citysentral |
City Sentral was a planned major retail and leisure development in city of Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, England. It was proposed by Realis Estates, and was a planned 650,000 sq ft (60,000 m2) regional shopping centre which was due to open in 2016.[1] The centre was to include a Marks & Spencer department store, a wide range of new stores and shops, cafés and restaurants, 'vibrant public spaces', a Cineworld cinema complex, an 80-room hotel, parking for 1,000 cars and a new bus station.[2]
City Sentral's proposed catchment comprised 870,000 people with more than 360,000 people living within 20 minutes drive of the city centre.[3]
The architects for the bus station were Grimshaw Architects and Benoy was working on City Sentral.
The branding of the proposed shopping centre divided residents in the city with many suggesting the deliberate misspelling of the word 'central' was unnecessary and open to ridicule.[4] City councillors were asked to support a motion demanding Realis changed the name but it was rejected on the grounds that it may deter inward investment.[5]
The £350 million regeneration project was intended to transform a prominent but run-down site comprising the existing East West Precinct and bus station. An outline planning application was submitted in October 2008 and consent was granted in February 2009. The Development Agreement was signed in December 2009.
Work on phase 1 (the new bus station) commenced on January 30, 2012[6] and was completed on March 26, 2013.[7]
In August 2013, the City Council asked Realis to present finalised plans or lose the contract.[8] No progress was made and the scheme was effectively abandoned in December 2014.[9]
A scaled down proposal dubbed Unity Walk was subsequently submitted, but this was in turn abandoned in July 2018. The future of the site is now uncertain. [10]
Stoke-on-Trent's Mandate For Change
City Sentral was part of Stoke-on-Trent City Council's "Mandate for Change" strategy that hoped to see £1.5 billion worth of private and public money invested in the city. As well as City Sentral, regeneration projects included the new CBD office scheme, new homes, new schools and the new University Quarter, new roads and other infrastructure plus new public realm across the city centre.[11]
