Things To Do in Manchester

Manchester Attractions

Exploring Castlefield

Manchester had its origins in Castlefield, immediately southwest of the city's historic core, which local authorities have designated an "urban heritage park." Interlaced with canals that helped transport building supplies during the city's late-19th-century heyday, Castlefield's known as a place to escape from more crowded venues downtown. Long ago, it was a densely populated neighborhood that housed as many as 2,000 civilians beginning in A.D. 79, when Manchester was Mamucium, a fortified Roman camp strategically positioned between other Roman outposts, Chester and Carlisle. The roots of modern-day Manchester grew from here, providing the basic goods and services that supplied the soldiers in the nearby fort. After the Romans abandoned their fortress in A.D. 411, the settlement, by then known as Mancestra, stood alone throughout the Dark Ages.

Manchester slumbered for centuries until its heyday came in the 18th and 19th centuries. The development of the Bridgewater Canal, which transferred raw materials and coal to Manchester's factories from outlying regions, spurred the city's industrial growth. Warehouses arose around the wharves, their names suggesting their wares (for example, Potato Wharf). Later, Liverpool Road housed the world's first passenger railway station, today home to the Museum of Science and Industry.

Though the city atrophied for decades after its reign as industrial capital of the world, an interest in urban renewal emerged in the 1970s. Many of the city's grand canals and warehouses have been restored, and Castlefield is once again a thriving, vibrant district loaded with a curious mixture of antique and ultramodern buildings randomly positioned next to each other. Such neighboring districts as the Northern Quarter seem to specialize in funky bars and shops selling all manner of used clothing and 1960s-era nostalgia.

Manchester Shopping

High-street favourites line Market Street, flanked by the expansive Manchester Arndale shopping centre. Upcoming designers show off their wares in the Northern Quarter while Deansgate, King Street and St Ann's Square offer more mainstream retailers. Head to New Cathedral Street and Exchange Square for high-end shopping in Harvey Nichols and trendy The Triangle mall or the Northern Quarter for unique fashion, trendy accessories and eclectic music shops like Vinyl Exchange.

Manchester Nightlife

Music is Manchester's first love. The city boasts everything from indie bars and disco nights to jazz joints and world-class concerts. Bar-hop around the Gay Village on Canal Street, hear original live bands in Night & Day Café in the Northern Quarter also home to cocktail bars and funky clubs like Mint Lounge. City centre haunts include Knott Bar under the railway arches and the MEN Arena for big-name concerts and comedy.

More To Do in Manchester

Frommer's Favorite Experiences in Manchester