Capitol Centre, Cardiff Explained

Capitol Centre
Location:Cardiff, Wales
Address:Queen Street, Cardiff
Coordinates:51.4822°N -3.1722°W
Opening Date:1990[1]
Owner:NewRiver Retail [2]
Number Of Stores:36
Number Of Anchors:3
Floors:2
Parking:420

Capitol Centre (Welsh: Canolfan Capitol) (previously: Capitol Exchange Centre (Welsh: Canolfan cyfnewid Capitol)) is an indoor shopping centre in the city of Cardiff, Wales. Functioning as one of the city's retail malls, The building is built on the site of the former Capitol Theatre, and is situated at the eastern end of Queen Street near the Dumfries Place bus terminus and Cardiff Queen Street railway station.

It was anchored by a large H&M store, with the front of the centre being dominated by Tesco since Virgin Megastores and Zavvi ceased operations in 2009. Tesco has dominated the front of the Capitol Centre since November 2012.

History

The Capitol Centre was opened in 1990, with attempts to replicate the original architecture. Ceramic tiles from the previous Victorian Dutch Cafe tearooms were incorporated on the eastern exterior.[3] The style of build dated very quickly and, in 1999, the centre underwent a £10 million redevelopment, which included the refurbishment of the pedestrian areas, the removal of the food court and new entrances into the centre (although much of the original external facade still remains). It was completed in November 1999.[4]

There were plans to develop 164 apartments, plus retail and commercial space and additional car parking facilities at the corner of North Edward Street and Station Terrace. This would provide 50 per cent additional spaces, bringing the total car parking spaces up to 632. The scheme architects, Dobson Architects, expected it could be completed by 2012, but this never happened.

In 2015 Capitol Centre was bought by new owner NewRiver Retail.

In 2022 plans were revealed to create a new 14,500 sq ft food court in attempts to revive the centre's fortunes.

Cinema

The centre had originally also housed a five-screen Odeon cinema up until 2001, it has reopened in April 2015 operated by Premiere Cinemas.[5] [6] In October 2022, Premier Cinema closed permanently.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Capitol Shopping Centre, Cardiff . PCP . 2 May 2008 .
  2. Web site: Capitol idea is a £30m boost for complex. icWales . 2 May 2008.
  3. News: Conor Gogarty . The once-bustling Cardiff shopping area that finally has new hope after decades of decay . Wales Online . 27 March 2022 . 4 April 2022 .
  4. Web site: Capitol Centre, Cardiff . Colman Architects . 15 January 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090716004103/http://www.colmanarchitects.co.uk/projectpage.cgi?id=2578_ . 16 July 2009 . dmy .
  5. News: Lights! Camera! Action! A £1m refit will see a former Cardiff cinema brought back to life in time for Christmas. 18 September 2014.
  6. Web site: Premiere Cinemas Cardiff. 2021-08-03. cardiff.premierecinemas.co.uk.