Bond Street Centre

About Bond Street Centre

Trinity Leeds is a shopping and leisure centre in Leeds, England, named after the adjacent 18th-century Holy Trinity Church. The shopping centre is located in Leeds city centre. It opened on 21 March 2013, with over 130, 000 recorded visitors on opening day. The development is in two parts: Trinity East, a new build development on the site of the former Trinity and Burton Arcades, and Trinity West, the redeveloped Leeds Shopping Plaza. The development has a catchment of 5. 5 million people offering a spend of £1. 93 billion annually. It has lifted Leeds from seventh to fourth in the CACI UK retail rankings and has created over 3000 jobs. The combined scheme has 93000m2 of retail floor space for 120 stores anchored by the flagship Marks & Spencer and Topshop /Topman stores. These units existed as standalone stores and have been expanded and remodelled into Trinity Leeds. The shopping centre has a concept food area in Trinity West, namely "Trinity Kitchen", hosting both permanent tenants and rotating "pop-up" vendors. Everyman Cinemas opened its first premises outside London, a 3700m2 four screen art-house cinema. The Lead Architect for constructing Trinity Leeds was Chapman Taylor. Among other awards, it has been given the 'VIVA Design and Development Award' at the 2015 global VIVA (Vision, Innovation, Value & Achievement) Best-of-the-Best Awards, hosted by the International Council of Shopping Centers (ICSC). BackgroundSince around 2000 plans were made to redevelop the adjacent Trinity and Burton Arcades a largely run down shopping precinct which opened in 1973 into a modern shopping centre using designs by the late Enric Miralles under the name Trinity Quarter. However this had been long delayed because of arguments at planning between the then owners of both centres Universities Superannuation Scheme (USS) (owner of the Trinity and Burton arcades) and Topps Estates owner of the Leeds Shopping Plaza which included Topps Estates objecting the scheme and lodging its own rival scheme on the site.

Bond Street Centre Description

Trinity Leeds is a shopping and leisure centre in Leeds, England, named after the adjacent 18th-century Holy Trinity Church. The shopping centre is located in Leeds city centre. It opened on 21 March 2013, with over 130, 000 recorded visitors on opening day. The development is in two parts: Trinity East, a new build development on the site of the former Trinity and Burton Arcades, and Trinity West, the redeveloped Leeds Shopping Plaza. The development has a catchment of 5. 5 million people offering a spend of £1. 93 billion annually. It has lifted Leeds from seventh to fourth in the CACI UK retail rankings and has created over 3000 jobs. The combined scheme has 93000m2 of retail floor space for 120 stores anchored by the flagship Marks & Spencer and Topshop /Topman stores. These units existed as standalone stores and have been expanded and remodelled into Trinity Leeds. The shopping centre has a concept food area in Trinity West, namely "Trinity Kitchen", hosting both permanent tenants and rotating "pop-up" vendors. Everyman Cinemas opened its first premises outside London, a 3700m2 four screen art-house cinema. The Lead Architect for constructing Trinity Leeds was Chapman Taylor. Among other awards, it has been given the 'VIVA Design and Development Award' at the 2015 global VIVA (Vision, Innovation, Value & Achievement) Best-of-the-Best Awards, hosted by the International Council of Shopping Centers (ICSC). BackgroundSince around 2000 plans were made to redevelop the adjacent Trinity and Burton Arcades a largely run down shopping precinct which opened in 1973 into a modern shopping centre using designs by the late Enric Miralles under the name Trinity Quarter. However this had been long delayed because of arguments at planning between the then owners of both centres Universities Superannuation Scheme (USS) (owner of the Trinity and Burton arcades) and Topps Estates owner of the Leeds Shopping Plaza which included Topps Estates objecting the scheme and lodging its own rival scheme on the site.