14 vanished landmarks that have been confined to history
We took a look at what happened to these grand and iconic former sights
St George s Place, Liverpool (Image: Handout)
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Liverpool has its fair share of landmarks - from the Three Graces to the Superlambananas and our two Premier League football stadiums.
This week’s Apollo Art Diary picks out four outdoor sculpture trails and exhibitions that you can still enjoy while the long wait continues for UK museums to reopen…
The 11th Liverpool Biennial launched its first ‘chapter’ on 20 March – a series of outdoor sculptures, as well as sound and digital pieces on its website, commissioned from nine artists. Among the sculptors are Larry Achiampong, whose
Pan African Flags For the Relic Travellers’ Alliance, with their designs of 54 stars representing the 54 nations of Africa,
are sited in 10 locations across
the city; Linder, whose billboard
Bower of Bliss takes its cues both from
Place North West | GALLERY | Invesco s Copper House completes placenorthwest.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from placenorthwest.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
January 28, 2021 at 12:43 pmBy Akkad
Not sure what Akkad is talking about. The slavery museum has been in the city for 15 years. Its relocation has been on the cards for a long time. Long before the whole George Floyd business.
January 28, 2021 at 1:35 pmBy Anonymous
The more I read this article the more confused I get. When did Dr. Martin Luther King Junior live or work in Liverpool? Did Royal Albert build that dock (I mean pay for it, not build it) or did somebody important decide to name it after him, to please him? And who is Royal Albert anyway? Was he a Lancashire lad? Unusual choice of PLACE names, don’t you think?
Landmark scheme to transform iconic Liverpool waterfront buildings
Multiple buildings are set to be brought to life
The Dr Martin Luther King Jr Building, Albert Dock
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