1987 '“ the year an awful lot of things were built
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As one new neighbourhood was being completed, work on another was starting, there were ambitious plans in place for a big shopping centre, the town’s new theatre was almost finished, as was Gatwick’s new Terminal.
These pictures were published in the Crawley Observer in 1987 and give a fascinating look at how much the town has changed – and how much artist’s impressions can differ when it comes to the finished product.
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Hide AdThe shopping centre in question was, of course, County Mall – then known as TC6 – and it was originally going to look a lot different than it does today.
For a start, the entire central area was to be open-air, with only the shops either side under cover.
The idea, it was said, was to create “a high street atmosphere”.
Luckily, some one must have pointed out that such an atmosphere already existed – in the High Street – and the design changed to the indoor shopping centre we know and love.
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Hide AdOver at The Hawth – the name of the area but not yet the theatre – 14,000 bricks, 300 tonnes of steel, 1,500 cubic metres of concrete and 2,600 square metres of roofing tiles were beginning to take shape.
The £6.7million centre was on schedule to open in spring 1988 and, it was reported, would “put paid to any belief that Crawley is a cultural desert”.
Also due to open in the spring of 1988 was Gatwick Airport’s £200 million North Terminal.
According to the report, the Terminal was built on land that had originally been earmarked for a second runway, once the agreement between Gatwick the West Sussex County Council expired in 2019.
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