Salford

Salford is a city in Greater Manchester, immediately to the west of the city of Manchester. Salford borders Manchester and Trafford to the east and South and to the north the Boroughs of Bolton,and Bury.

The Salford skyline

Understand

Salford is home to the Roman Catholic Cathedral for the diocese of the same name, which includes most of Greater Manchester and parts of Lancashire and West Yorkshire. Although the City of Salford borders with the City of Manchester, in part along the River Irwell and in the inner city, where Strangeways borders Broughton and Higher Broughton borders Cheetham Hill, it is a city in its own right (as its more loyal, long term residents will often let you know if you give them a reason). To incomers, this loyalty is a little less pronounced, as it remains, in many ways, a city without its own centre. Manchester's influence remains strong and the boundary meanders through the middle of shopping districts, such as on Bury Old Road in Cheetham Hill, bisects businesses and even goes through party walls in places. Many people who move to the area have a Greater Manchester perspective. The city is extremely diverse, ranging from an urban city centre environment at its immediate border with the City of Manchester, into suburbia and then into open fields at semi-rural Worsley. More and more people are choosing to make Salford their home with the welcome regeneration of inner city areas such as Broughton, Ordsall and Salford Quays. Many areas such as Swinton, Eccles, Walkden and Worsley provide a good environment to bring up families and are well established communities. Ellesmere Park and the best parts of Worsley are extremely affluent and can often rival anything South Manchester or nearby, very upmarket Prestwich and Whitefield have to offer.

A large proportion of Greater Manchester's Jewish population lives in Salford, mainly in Broughton Park, parts of Kersal and in Higher Broughton around Leicester Road.

Get in

By air

🌍 Manchester Airport (MAN IATA), known locally as Ringway, is located to the South of Greater Manchester and offers internal, European and intercontinental flights. Direct trains serve Salford Crescent from the Airport's railway station. However, to reach most parts of the city, the best option would be to take a train to Manchester city centre and take a tram from Piccadilly, a train from Piccadilly or Victoria to the relevant suburban stop, or a bus.

Liverpool John Lennon Airport is located approximately 30miles to the West of Salford and can be reached by car, via the M62, or by coach, which stops at Manchester Chorlton Street and Eccles without the need for pre-booking. Liverpool Airport is served primarily by budget carriers.

Barton Aerodrome, between Eccles and Worsley, is now called City Airport. It contains the South Lancashire Aeroclub, which offer pleasure flights.

By train

Salford Central

Salford is served by two railway stations: 🌍 Salford Central and 🌍 Salford Crescent, however, much of the city is better served by 🌍 Manchester Piccadilly. Parts of the city are also quite near Bolton and Wigan. Wigan is directly on the line serving Preston, Carlisle, Glasgow and Edinburgh, from London and the south, and is very well served.

By tram

Salford is served by the Eccles Line on the Metrolink system, which runs approximately every ten minutes. This Line connects Eccles with Manchester Piccadilly via Eccles New Road, Salford Quays and Manchester City Centre. Passengers can change at Cornbrook to connect with the southbound Altrincham Line or at Piccadilly Gardens to connect with the Northbound Bury Line. Plans are afoot to extend the Metrolink Network across the North-East and South of Greater Manchester, though none of these new routes will go through Salford.

By bus

The nearest National Express coach station is Manchester Central, just off Portland street in Manchester city centre and a short walk from the Picadilly Gardens Metrolink stop. The regular Manchester to Liverpool service has stops along Regent Road in Salford.

Local bus services are provided by Firstbus for the most part. Buses from Manchester city centre leave for various parts of Salford from Piccadilly bus station as well as Shudehill.

By car

Follow any directions relating to Manchester and you will find your way. The M602 motorway, off the M60 orbital road, is signposted Manchester and Salford. There are also signs on the Manchester/Salford inner ring road.

Get around

Like much of Greater Manchester the area is quite well served by public transport. The Metrolink tram service is reliable but pricey and it is well worth considering a day ticket (Travelcard) if you plan a few journeys on the system. Most bus services in Salford are provided by Firstbus. Day tickets are also available. Some night bus services serve the area on Friday and Saturday nights.

As with most larger UK cities an A-Z map is a must. Most of Salford should be in any smaller Manchester A-Z and all will be in any A-Z, or similar, covering Greater Manchester.

See

The River Irwell flows through Salford and forms, for the most part, the border with Bury and Manchester. Canals include the Manchester Ship Canal, which forms the border with Trafford and the Bridgewater Canal, Britain's oldest.

  • The Salford Quays have recently been redeveloped, and contain some interesting architecture, an outlet mall, The Lowry Art Gallery and Theatres and The Imperial War Museum North, which is over the water in Trafford Borough.
  • 🌍 Ordsall Hall. Tudor manor house
  • 🌍 Working Class Movement Library.
  • 🌍 Salford RC Cathedral.
  • 🌍 Worsley Village.
  • 🌍 Walkden, Manchester Road East. Walkden is a small village by Salford. Well worth checking out for its extensive range of shops and restaurants. However, it is not suitable for off-road vehicles to drive along due to the 3-tonne weight limit on some roads.
  • 🌍 BBC Tour at MediaCityUK, The Greenhouse, 101-110 Broadway, Salford, M50 2EQ, +44 1618 865300. Mon-Fri: 8:00am-5:00pm; Sat-Sun: Closed. The tour takes 1.5 hours. £10.75 adults, £7 children, £9.25-9.75 concessions, family tickets available.

Do

  • 🌍 Salford City Stadium (AJ Bell Stadium). Home to Salford Red Devils (rugby league) and Sale Sharks (rugby union).
  • 🌍 Manchester United FC, Old Trafford, Sir Matt Busby Way, Stretford, M16 0RA. is close by in Trafford.

Buy

  • 🌍 Lowry Outlet Mall, Salford Quays, Salford, M50 3AH, +44 1618 481850. Low priced designer clothes/products in an indoor mall. Tons of stores to buy clothes and other goods at discounted prices. Contains a Nike outlet store, The Gap, Accesorize, amongst others. Also has bars and restaurants.
  • West One at Eccles near the tram stop. This venture seems doomed and plans are it will reduce in size giving way to a supermarket in part.
  • Salford Shopping City, Pendleton. This is hardly one for the tourists, but it is clean and offers locals, many of whom will be residents of the nearby tower blocks, a reasonable selection of shops. Of interest to students of urban planning perhaps? You can not help wondering what all this 1960s concrete replaced.
  • Swinton Precinct, Chorley Road, Swinton. This is over the road from Salford's Civic Centre. It serves mainly residents of the suburbs of Swinton and Pendlebury.
  • Ellesmere Centre, Manchester Rd/Bolton Road, Walkden.
  • 🌍 Trafford Centre, Trafford Park. Reached by bus from Eccles, Manchester City Centre or Stretford Metrolink and dedicated link bus ( leaving Stretford station turn right and then first right for the bus stop ), or by car via the M60. This is a temple for shopping, as indicated by its design and is located across the boundary in Trafford Borough.
  • Manchester United Shop, Old Trafford Stadium, Sir Matt Busby Way, also in neighbouring Trafford Borough. This is a mecca for all those wishing to buy the latest Manchester United products. Everything can be bought here, from replica shirts to teddy bears.

Eat

Eccles cake

The nearby village of Eccles provides the namesake of Eccles cake. While they are not under the same EU protections as the Cornish pasty (meaning anyone can make Eccles cakes anywhere legally), Lancashire Eccles Cakes still produce them in the area commercially as a storefront to customers, a supplier to UK supermarkets and exporter to markets worldwide.

At The Quays there is a pleasant square between The Lowry and the neighbouring outlet mall. There you will find a selection of bars and eating places including a Pizza Express and a Cafe Rouge. Over the water, in Trafford, at The Imperial War Museum North, the cafe has great views of the Lowry and the emerging media city.

The Lowry has its own restaurant which also has a pleasant outside terrace overlooking The Imperial War Museum North. Service is attentive and the food very good.

There are also good restaurants around all areas of Salford, although these are mostly serving locals. The very pleasant urban village suburbs of Monton and Worsley are both worth a mention however.

The Restaurant at Greater Manchester's first five star hotel The Lowry Hotel (just behind Manchester city centre's Deansgate and linked by a futuristic bridge to the square behind The House of Fraser department store) is one of the top places to eat in the conurbation. Take care if using a taxi to say "The Lowry Hotel", so as not to confuse it with the arts centre a couple of miles away. It is said they have a new take on afternoon tea which is a modern alternative to the offerings of such as The Midland Hotel.

The Campanile Hotel ( a French budget chain ) has a reasonably priced restaurant on Regent Road, walking distance from Manchester centre and handy for The Quays.

Drink

  • 🌍 The Crescent, 18-21 The Crescent, M5 4PF (near Salford University), +44 161 736 5600. Mon-Fri: noon-midnight; Sat-Sun: noon-1:00am. Pub where Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels once drank.
  • Lime Bar (at The Lowry Outlet Mall). bar

Sleep

There are a few budget hotels worth considering, into Salford, just outside Manchester city centre.

  • The Campanile, Regent Road (opposite "Renault Manchester").
  • The Stay Inn Hotel (junction of Blackfriars and Trinity Way).

Showing what an unusual city Salford is. You will find these just across Blackfriars Bridge and Victoria Bridge respectively, off Deansgate. They are clean and reasonably priced, but you could not be more central with these two options however.

  • The Manchester Central Travelodge, Blackfiars (just over the river Irwell from Manchester city centre). warned is very popular at weekends with stags and hens!
  • Premier Lodge (just over the river Irwell from Manchester city centre).
  • The Novotel Manchester West (Worsley near the M60 motorway). country club style hotel
  • The Lowry Hotel. Salford boasts what was the first, and for a very short time the only, five star hotel in Greater Manchester. It offers a range of accommodation including luxurious suites popular with visiting stars who are playing at the nearby MEN arena.

Stay safe

Salford, in common with other inner city areas, suffers from a disproportionate level of crime. The majority of crime is petty. Street robberies are rare, though theft of and from vehicles is rife. Salford does have a "reputation." However most of the stories regarding Salford and its villains are very much the stuff of urban myth and legend. Common sense, being streetwise, and awareness of your surroundings should minimise the risk of being a victim of crime. In an emergency, dial 999 or 112 and ask for the service you require (Police, Fire or Ambulance).

Greater Manchester Police 0161 872 5050 (non-emergency)

Police Stations:

  • Swinton (24hours, Salford Police Headquarters), Chorley Road, Swinton, M27 6AZ.
  • Pendleton (24 Hours, closest to City Centre and Quays), Pendleton Police Station, Meyrick Road, Salford, M6 5JA (next to Salford Shopping City/Precinct)
  • Eccles, Hardy Street, Eccles, M30 7NB
  • Little Hulton, 382 Manchester Road East, Little Hulton, M38 9WH

Connect

The international telephone dialling code for the United Kingdom is +44. The local area code is 0161. Salford does not have a postcode of its own as it is in the Manchester "M" Postal Area. Thus, Salford Postcodes are in the following format: M1 1ZZ or M11 1ZZ.

Go next

North West England.

Further afield.

Greater Manchester.

Local countryside can be found at

Routes through Salford

Stockport Warrington  anticlockwise  clockwise  Oldham Leeds
Glasgow Bolton  NW  SE  merges with
Liverpool Warrington  W  E  merges with and
Preston Horwich  NW  SE  Central Manchester South Manchester


City of Salford
gollark: Support for `b` has been added.
gollark: Hold on, that will be patched in v6.12468.
gollark: - All this useless random junk can autoupdate (this is probably a backdoor)!- EZCopy allows you to easily install potatOS on another device, just by sticking it in the disk drive of any potatOS device!- fs.load and fs.dump - probably helpful somehow.- Blocks bad programs (like the "Webicity" browser).- Fully-featured process manager.- Can run in "hidden mode" where it's at least not obvious at a glance that potatOS is installed.- Convenient, simple uninstall with the "uninstall" command.- Turns on any networked potatOS computers!- Edits connected signs to use as ad displays.- A recycle bin.- An exorcise command, which is like delete but better.- Support for a wide variety of Lorem Ipsum.
gollark: Best viewed in Internet Explorer 6.00000000000004 running on a Difference Engine emulated under MacOS 7 on a Pentium 3. Features:- Fortunes/Dwarf Fortress output/Chuck Norris jokes on boot (wait, IS this a feature?)- (other) viruses (how do you get them in the first place? running random files like this?) cannot do anything particularly awful to your computer - uninterceptable (except by crashing the keyboard shortcut daemon, I guess) keyboard shortcuts allow easy wiping of the non-potatOS data so you can get back to whatever nonsense you do fast- Skynet (rednet-ish stuff over websocket to my server) and Lolcrypt (encoding data as lols and punctuation) built in for easy access!- Convenient OS-y APIs - add keyboard shortcuts, spawn background processes & do "multithreading"-ish stuff.- Great features for other idio- OS designers, like passwords and fake loading (est potatOS.stupidity.loading [time], est potatOS.stupidity.password [password]).- Digits of Tau available via a convenient command ("tau")- Potatoplex and Loading built in ("potatoplex"/"loading") (potatoplex has many undocumented options)!- Stack traces (yes, I did steal them from MBS)- Backdoors- er, remote debugging access (it's secured, via ECC signing on disks and websocket-only access requiring a key for the other one)
gollark: <@111608748027445248> ALL OF THEM.
This article is issued from Wikivoyage. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.