The Gate, Newcastle

The Gate
The exterior of the Gate.
Map
General information
StatusCompleted, in use
TypeLeisure, Entertainment
Town or cityNewcastle upon Tyne
CountryUnited Kingdom
Coordinates54°58′23″N 1°37′05″W / 54.973°N 1.618°W / 54.973; -1.618
Current tenantsSee venues
Opened28 November 2002
Cost£80 million
ClientLand Securities
OwnerCrown Estate
Technical details
Floor area19,235 m2 (207,040 sq ft)
Website
www.thegatenewcastle.co.uk

The Gate is a retail and leisure complex in Newcastle upon Tyne, England.

History

The venue takes its name from the street on which it stands, Newgate Street. It is part of the historic Grainger Town area of Newcastle. The noted concert hall the Mayfair Ballroom was among the buildings demolished to make way for The Gate. It was opened on 28 November 2002.[1]

The Gate has 19 venues spread across three floors, including a 16-screen Cineworld Cinema and Aspers Casino. The Gate is also next to Newcastle's Chinatown; there is an entrance on Stowell Street. The Gate building was built to replace the 35-year-old, 7-storey Newgate House, which was home to the prolific music venue; The Mayfair club. Mood Bar opened on 28 November 2002, the same time as The Gate.

The 19,235 m2, £80 million venue was built by Land Securities and the 12-metre-tall (39 ft) sculpture outside, "Ellipsis Eclipses", was designed by Danny Lane.[2] The 24-metre-high (79 ft)[3] glass façade was designed by Space Decks Limited.[4] The Odeon Cinema (later Empire, now Cineworld) was built to replace the 71-year-old Odeon/Paramount cinema on Pilgrim Street, which after the Gate's opening remained disused until its demolition in 2017.[5] The Gate provided 400 new jobs when opened and a further 600 during construction.

In 2004 BDP Lighting won a Lighting Design award for their work at The Gate.[6]

The Gate won the Property Week award for Best Commercial UK Mixed-Use Leisure Scheme, and the British Toilet Association awarded The Gate a Loo of the Year Award and awarded it five stars.[7]

In 2010 Jamie Ritblat's property company, Delancey, bought The Gate in a £900 million package of properties from PropInvest Group, in partnership with the Royal Bank of Scotland. In 2012 The Gate was sold to the Crown Estate for £60 million.[8]

Venues

A view of the inside of the Gate showing the escalator from the ground floor to the first floor.
Empire Cinema at the Gate (now Cineworld).
Entertainment
  • Aspers Casino
  • Cineworld Cinema
  • YumeWorld Family Entertainment Centre
  • Escape Newcastle - Escape Rooms
  • The CTRL Pad - Video Gaming Lounge
  • Game of Throwing - Axe-Throwing Range
  • Selfie Station
Bars and nightclubs
Restaurants
Retail
  • Vintage Vera - Second-hand Clothing

References

  1. ^ "Last reel for 1930s cinema". BBC News. 22 November 2002. Retrieved 2 October 2011.
  2. ^ The Gate: Ellipsis Eclipses, Commissions North
  3. ^ Tyne Clubs - The Gate, BBC
  4. ^ Steel and Glass Structures Archived 2007-11-16 at the Wayback Machine, Space Decks
  5. ^ Tyne Features - Odeon Cinema, BBC
  6. ^ BDP's Double Bill at Lighting Awards (29-Mar-2004) Archived 2007-12-24 at the Wayback Machine, Building Design Partnership
  7. ^ "About Us". The Gate. Retrieved 7 May 2011.
  8. ^ "The Queen's property company buys The Gate". The Evening Chronicle. 12 September 2012. Retrieved 13 September 2012.

External links

  • The Gate official website
  • 3D Pamoramas of The Gate at quicktimevirtualreality.com and at BBC.co.uk
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