Martineau Place


Martineau Place is a shopping centre located in the city centre of Birmingham, England. It contains a mixture of shops and restaurants, with the emphasis on food and drink which is located on the roofs of the shops. Retailers include Sainsbury's, Deichmann, Boots, Argos and Poundland, the upper levels of the centre include a 168-room hotel.
It is located on land bounded by High Street, Union Street, Bull Street and Corporation Street, with primary retail frontages on all these streets. It is directly opposite the House of Fraser department store, formerly known as Rackhams.
The Martineau Way pedestrian route runs through the centre of Martineau Place, and includes further retail frontages. This also connects the Centre to main thoroughfare New Street and to the separate Priory Square shopping centre.

Original construction

The centre was originally developed between 1959 and 1965, as part of a large development for insurance company Commercial Union. It took the name of a street on the site, which was named after the Martineau family, a family that included several Lord Mayors of Birmingham. The original development was designed by J. Seymour Harris & Partners, and was the first slab-and-podium in the commercial centre of the city. A fourteen-storey office tower in the style of the Pirelli Tower in Milan, with tapered ends and a rooftop arcade, sits above the shopping precinct, restaurants and covered parking.

2001 redevelopment

The shopping centre levels of Martineau Place were extensively redeveloped in 2001 by the Birmingham Alliance. Detailed planning permission was granted in 1999. Martineau Place was completed in September 2001. As part of the development, the "Bull Street Hump", a subway system for vehicles and pedestrians, was removed and repaved to create a crossing. This was completed in July 2000.
The undulating topography of the area meant that the area at ground level for Union Street has to be accessed via steps on Bull Street. This topography meant that shops could be created on Bull Street ground level which would generally be underground if located on Union Street. Above the shops, a sheltered public square was created. The same material used to shelter the square has been used to cover the entrance at Union Street and the entrance to a Sainsbury's supermarket.
As part of the development, the facade was modernised from the 1960s appearance. A new frontage on Corporation Street was constructed with a circular turret-like structure on the junction of Corporation Street and Union Street forming the entrance to a Gap store.
In 2004, contracts were exchanged and the Birmingham Alliance sold the redeveloped shopping centre, raising sale proceeds of £93 million net of costs.
The redevelopment of Martineau Place in 2001 had been planned as the first phase of a wider development of the area, with a second phase expected to redevelop further 1960s-era buildings at the other side of Bull Street, including the adjacent shopping centre formerly known as Martineau Square. The completed development originally received a single combined planning approval, and was to be known as "Martineau Galleries" when completed. However the second phase was not progressed, and the un-modernised part is now called Priory Square.

2016 Hotel development

In 2016 One Martineau Place, the 13-storey office building above the development underwent a £35 million refurbishment, and was converted to a 168-room apartment hotel under the Staybridge Suites brand.

Recent developments

In July 2015, Poundland agreed a ten-year lease on a 30,000 square foot unit on Corporation Street. Burger King also agreed a 20-year lease on an 8,000 square foot unit that would become its flagship store in Birmingham city centre.
In 2017, the West Midlands Metro was extended running past the northern entrance to Martineau Place, with the Corporation Street tram stop adjacent to the centre.
In 2017, the owners of the centre secured flexible use categories for many of the units in the inner Martineau Way part of the development, which had seen higher vacancy levels than the main frontages on the outer part of the development, in order to ensure vacancies could be quickly filled.