• The ultimate insider's guide to Manchester • Features interesting and unusual places not found in traditional travel guides • Part of the international 111 Places/111 Shops series with over 650 titles and 3.8 million copies in print worldwide • Appeals to both the local market (more than 510,000 people call Manchester home) and the tourist market (more than 119 million people visit Manchester every year!) • Fully illustrated with 111 full-page color photographs • Revised and updated edition Manchester is far more than a grey provincial city preoccupied with the business of making money. The bales of cotton goods awaiting export have gone from the grand warehouses styled like palaces, and the cotton mills no longer hum with the sound of machinery. Yet the buildings remain in all their glory of tiles, terracotta and stained glass - converted to hotels, offices, chic apartments, hipster bars, fine eateries or gritty drinking dens. The textile trade may have disappeared, but you can find sustainable fashion in the old rag-trade district, and top quality coats and jackets are still being hand-sewn in the last remaining family-owned clothing factory. This book will also take you to alternative Manchester - Radical Manchester from Peterloo to the Pankhursts, Literary Manchester from Elizabeth Gaskell to Anthony Burgess, and of course to Madchester, the crazy music scene of Morrissey, Tony Wilson, the Hacienda and Factory Records.
Fab book filled with a wide range of places to see from parks, churches, restaurants and museums and some wacky things the Hanging Ditch or Legh Road. I’ve lived in Manchester for nearly 10 years but haven’t done more than half of them. Excited to give them a go. One small note, I think it excluded things that I think should have been there like Stockport’s Underbank, it’s mentioned in passing but feel like it would benefitted from more of a feature. Also a lack of things to visit in Didsbury - how did La Chouquette not make it? But appreciate you have to draw the line somewhere!