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Long Row

Street in Nottingham, England From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Long Row
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Long Row is a row of retail buildings in Nottingham City Centre forming the north side of Old Market Square, Nottingham.

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Notable buildings

Long Row West

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Cooke and Foster at 56 Long Row in 1840
  • 70 West End Arcade 1920s
  • 67 The Dragon by John Henry Statham. 1879. This was originally a house dating from 1615 (possibly the first brick building in Nottingham), which evolved into a tavern named the George and Dragon. In 1865 it was taken over by Greenall Whitley and remained under ownership in 1991. It reopened as The Dragon in 1994.[1]
  • 65-66 Pepe's Piri Piri
  • 65A City Centre Apartments
  • 62-64 Tesco
  • 61 Maryland Chicken
  • 60 Chatime
  • 58 and 59
  • 56 facades of 3 former merchants' houses dating from 1705, 1720 and 1740. Cooke and Foster ca 1840. From ca 1920 it housed Pearson's department store.[2] (Habitat in 2016, KFC from September 2020)
  • 52 late 18th century house, now converted for retail use.[3] (British Heart Foundation in 2016)
  • 50 and 51 late 18th century[4] (British Heart Foundation in 2016)
  • 49 The Talbot, William Arthur Heazell and Sons 1876-78[5] (Yates Wine Lodge from 1928 to 2019, Slug and Lettuce from 2019)
  • 48 (Subway from ?-2020. Falafel's from 2021.)

Long Row

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Debenhams 1927
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Queen's Chambers, 1897

Long Row East

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Oriel Chambers, 1905-06
  • 22 Russell Chambers, Marshall and Turner 1895 (Clarks in 2016)
  • 21 Clarks
  • 20 Oriel Chambers, William Arthur Heazell and Sons 1905-06[12] (Rush Hair in 2016)
  • 17-18 Alexander Ellis Anderson 1924[13] (Cooperative Travel in 2016)
  • 15-16 London, City and Midland Bank. Thomas Bostock Whinney 1911[14] (Jem Leisure in 2016)
  • 14 The Works
  • 6-12 Primark (site of the former Black Boy Hotel, built as a branch of Littlewoods in 1970.)
  • 4-5 Ann Summer and Thomson, a building designed by Thomas Cecil Howitt.
  • 1-3 Three and Thomas Cook, built on the site of Skinner & Rook Wine Merchants.
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References

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