Six years ago, Elle King teamed up with Dierks Bentley for their hit “Different for Girls”, which rocketed to No. 1 on the country charts when it was released in 2016.
29.04.2022 - 11:35 / manchestereveningnews.co.uk
A massive three-storey office block is set to be built close to the railway line at Middlebrook. Orbit Investments, who operate The Parklands commercial park, close to the Bolton Wanderers stadium, have submitted plans in the past week to build a ninth block at their site, which is just south of Horwich Parkway station, off De Havilland Way.
The block would contain 3,891 sqm of office floorspace, increasing the capacity of the entire Parklands area by more than 10 per cent. Current occupiers at the park include include NatWest, AXA Insurance, Keoghs, E.on, AO.com, Bond Turner, AG Barr, ISS, Premex, NHS, Hitachi and Royal Mail.
The proposed block would be built the south west of the existing office building, 3 The Parklands, and to the west of the multi-storey car park, which includes a self-storage business. The Spirit of Sport sculpture is placed at the principal entrance to the park.
Documents published by Bolton Council in support of the scheme, said: “The planning application involves the erection of a three-storey office building, parking provision and associated works. It would have 198 car parking spaces allocated to it and also includes provision for five cycle stands (10 cycle spaces) and three motorcycle spaces.
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“The scale and height of the proposed office building is consistent with the buildings within the surrounding area. The proposed office building would consist of grey cladding panels and blue facing brick.”
The mixed use Middlebrook development now extends to more than 200 acres. It markets itself as ‘the largest integrated and sustainable employment, leisure, sports and retail scheme in the country’.
The plans for the block will
Six years ago, Elle King teamed up with Dierks Bentley for their hit “Different for Girls”, which rocketed to No. 1 on the country charts when it was released in 2016.
Bravo has greenlit three new unscripted series including Real Girlfriends in Paris, Southern Charm: Leva Land, and XSCAPE /SWV, which was revealed on Thursday.
Brace yourselves sisters – the habit is coming to Manchester!
Dennis Waterman, star of Minder, The Sweeney and New Tricks, has died, aged 74. The news was announced by the actor’s family, who revealed in a statement that he died on Sunday (8 May) with his wife Pam by his side. “We are deeply saddened to announce that our beloved Dennis passed away very peacefully in hospital in Spain.
his home in Spain, with his wife Pam by his side. A statement said: "We are deeply saddened to announce that our beloved Dennis passed away very peacefully at his home in Spain.
British actor Dennis Waterman, who starred in the TV shows Minder, The Sweeney and New Tricks, has died at 74. No immediate information the cause was available.
In today’s episode of Bingeworthy, our revitalized TV and streaming podcast, co-hosts Mike DeAngelo and Rodrigo Perez dive into Hulu’s new mystery series, “Under the Banner of Heaven.” The show follows a devout Mormon detective Jeb Pyre (played by Andrew Garfield) whose faith is tested as he investigates a brutal murder seemingly connected to an esteemed Utah family’s spiral into LDS Mormon fundamentalism and their distrust in the government (read our review here).
The new NCAA Name, Image, Likeness rule (NIL) that allows college athletes to monetize themselves could be at a crossroads. Top college receiver Jordan Addison is reportedly mulling a transfer from Pittsburgh amid rumors of massive booster blandishments from top football programs.
open in the area since the beginning of the pandemic. The newly built slender glass tower opened its doors at 159 W.
FX/Hulu’s big play for Emmy glory in this incredibly crowded season is an adaptation of Jon Krakauer’s excellent 2003 book “Under the Banner of Heaven,” a historical analysis of the history of Mormonism in this country framed alongside a dissection of a brutal murder case from 1984 in the state of Utah. While the book had the context of the history of the origin of the Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter-day Saints and how it got twisted into the mindset of the fundamentalist sect of Mormonism that pushed Ron and Dan Lafferty to commit brutal murder, the show feels at the beginning like it wants badly to be more “True Detective” and less Ken Burns, improving in the third and fourth episodes as it becomes more about a broken community than a specific murder.