COMMENT | Stephenson’s music
Words: Phil Griffin | Architectural photography: Daniel Hopkinson
Roger Stephenson OBE has withdrawn from the front line of Manchester architecture, from a position and cause he has been fighting for in his own name since 1979. He has made enemies and lost battles, but few would deny that Roger Stephenson OBE has had a greater impact on the shape and face of contemporary Manchester than any individual since Alfred Waterhouse. If Manchester has a look, it came out of the Stephenson closet. He was awarded a First Class Honours degree by Liverpool University School of Architecture in 1969. Stephenson is a progressive, and he moved through BDP and Michael Hyde & Associates (as a partner) before establishing Stephenson Mills (with George Mills) in 1979.
LOUISVILLE, Ky. City crews are set to clean, but not clear, homeless camps near Wayside Christian Mission and Louisville Muhammad Ali International Airport starting Thursday morning.
The camp areas for unsheltered residents that are scheduled for a cleaning beginning Thursday and ending Tuesday include the Jackson Street overpass between Jefferson and Market streets, the Preston Street overpass between Liberty and Jefferson streets and the Main Street overpass between Hancock and Jackson streets.
An encampment by 214 Adair St., which is on Kentucky Transportation Cabinet property near Crittenden Drive and the airport, will also get tidied up, officials previously said.
Here is the schedule for the phased cleaning of the camps near Wayside:
The garden centre cannabis factory in the shadow of Piccadilly Station This is a substantial discovery which has been discovered by officers thanks to a member of the public
Updated
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This is the £5m cannabis farm hidden close to Manchester s Piccadilly Station.
A former warehouse, it had been turned into what one witness described as like a garden centre .
Boy, 18, in hospital with serious spinal injuries after walking into carriageway near city centre
Police said he appears to have walked into the carriageway and confirmed investigations were continuing
Updated
The scene tonight (Image: ASP)
A teenage boy was seriously injured and in hospital tonight after a collision with a car on the outskirts of Manchester city centre.
Police said the 18-year-old was hit after he appears to have walked into the carriageway .
The teenager, who has not been named, suffered serious spinal injuries in the crash, police said.
He was rushed to hospital where he remained tonight.
A section of Great Ancoats Street was closed as police investigations continue.