Newcastle Pilgrim Street
Masterplan, Newcastle-upon-Tyne
2003-ongoing
The Pilgrim Street masterplan will establish a new city quarter in
Newcastle with an area of about 1 million sq ft and will connect the
town centre to the Quayside.
TFP have worked extensively in Newcastle. The 1991 award-winning masterplan
for the East Quayside has transformed the industrial waterfront of
Newcastle into a new commercial and cultural hub for the city. TFP
have a sound understanding of the big issues surrounding the potential
for optimising Central Newcastle.
Newcastle is evolving. The city began on the riverside but in the
19th century the centre shifted to the plateau. The Tyne Bridge reinforced
this shift. In the 1960s, the urban motorway segregated the city centre
and the Quayside. Regeneration of the Quayside in the 1990s has resulted
in two vibrant but disconnected centres. This project provides a unique
opportunity to reconnect the city centre and the Quayside. Newcastle
once led the world in retail innovation and, as recently as 1987,
was England's top retail destination outside London. However,
from 1995 onwards, competition from the Metro Centre and neighbouring
cities has seen a decline in Newcastle's retailing fortunes.
Meanwhile, national trends in shopping have seen a resurgence in city
centres. Therefore, there is enormous potential for Newcastle to engage
in this retail revolution focusing on Pilgrim Street. This area is
in decline, with a poor quality public realm and townscape, deteriorating
building stock and under-utilised land. Connections to surrounding
areas are poor and the setting of built heritage is compromised.
In devising solutions to these issues, TFP have come up with a series
of key concepts. The proposals are that the town centre and the Quayside
should be reconnected by the creation of the 'Geordie Ramblas.'
Newcastle and Gateshead have a plethora of cultural assets. The Geordie
Ramblas will link these and reconnect the town centre and the Quayside.
Pilgrim Street is the linchpin in creating the Geordie Ramblas. The
need to extend and rationalise the city centre has been identified.
This will be done by reinforcing the legibility of the city, optimising
use of existing transport infrastructure and rationalising the retail
diagram of the core by the setting up of a retail loop. Highly visible
corners will attract people from all destinations and the curve of
the street will increase visibility of frontages. New places connect
the retail loop and extend cultural linkages. The significance of
the work carried out to improve the Graingertown public realm is noted
and the need to build on this connectivity, with a variety of places,
a people friendly public realm with pedestrianisation and shared surfaces,
achieved by rationalising bus routes, strategic positioning of car
parking and of service access is recognised.
Overall, TFP's whole-hearted commitment is to creating a place
with variety, vibrancy, and a mixture of uses. In total there will
be 11 new places and 11 architectural projects. The improvement of
the setting and accessibility of Newcastle's built heritage
is seen as essential in order to improve and enhance the public realm
for the benefit of all – a distinctive 'place' will
be created instead of a highway.
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