Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

The Mercury Mall

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Opening date
  
June 1990

No. of anchor tenants
  
2

No. of floors
  
4

Parking
  
999

No. of stores and services
  
approx 45

Total retail floor area
  
41,000 sq m

Opened
  
June 1990

Phone
  
+44 1708 733620

Location
  
Romford, Havering, Greater London

Address
  
Mercury Gardens, Romford RM1 3EE, UK

Hours
  
Open today · 9AM–5:30PMWednesday9AM–5:30PMThursday9AM–5:30PMFriday9AM–5:30PMSaturday9AM–5:30PMSunday11AM–5PMMonday9AM–5:30PMTuesday9AM–5:30PMSuggest an edit

Similar
  
The Liberty, The Brewery, Romford Market, St Edward the Confesso, Church of St Mary Magdale

Profiles

Colour changing railings on escalators at the mercury mall


The Mercury Mall is an enclosed shopping centre in Romford, in the London Borough of Havering, Greater London. It opened in June 1990 as Liberty 2. From 2006 to August 2010 it was owned by The Mall Fund and was known as The Mall Romford. It is—along with The Liberty and The Brewery—one of the three main shopping centres in Romford.

Contents

Lydia lucy no place i d rather be the mercury mall romford 13th february 2016


History

The Liberty 2 opened with a mix of retail and leisure tenants, although these were spatially separated with the shops on the first two levels and the nightclub, cinema and bingo hall on the third floor. The name referred to existing Liberty Shopping Centre.

It was initially anchored by a Sainsbury's supermarket, but when this relocated to The Brewery elsewhere in the town centre, the former supermarket space in the mall was taken by Wilkinson. In 2001 shortly after the opening of The Brewery the Odeon Cinema closed, but reopened in 2012 as Premiere Cinemas which was then the cheapest multiplex cinema in the UK.

In 2006 the Liberty 2 was expanded with the redevelopment of the adjacent former Dolphin Centre to form part of the retail site. The redevelopment included the development of a new anchor store, an Asda supermarket, which was also linked into the mall at level two. The redevelopment also saw a housing block above the supermarket site. As part of the revamp, the centre - which had previously still been heavily carrying the 'Liberty 2' branding - was rebranded under The Mall Fund's corporate identity.

The Mercury has been used as a filming location; for instance, it was featured in the Reebok "Belly's gonna getcha!" television advertisement. In the advert you can clearly see The Mercury's lifts. The centre is also frequently used in hidden camera TV shows Bad Robot's and Off Their Rockers.

In 2011 the centre was sold to Rockspring UK and The Other Retail Group as part of a package of centres from The Mall Fund, the centre was then rebranded The Mercury Mall.

In 2013 The Mercury Mall became the backdrop for the horror movie Death Walks.

In 2014 Rockspring announced it was to sell it's raft of shopping centres, these centres were sold to Ellandi and Lone Star.

Layout

The Mercury is separated from the adjacent The Liberty shopping centre at ground level by the Romford ring road, but is connected to it by an underground section of the shopping mall, accessed from the lower level, which leads up into The Liberty. Although the two centres are connected physically in this way, they are independently owned and are run separately from one another.

It comprises two levels of retail stores, and a third level which includes a Mecca bingo hall and, since late 2012, the independently run Premiere Cinemas & Stages Dance Studio since 2013. There is a forth level which used to be the home of Pulse Nightclub, which closed in 1999.

The centre is iconic in Romford due to its glass dome enclosure, which is represented frequently in local art and illustration.

Other stores and services in The Mercury include McDonald's, GAME, Blue Inc, Superdrug and Peacocks.

References

The Mercury Mall Wikipedia


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