Liverpool skyline and views- Views from the Central Library, Liverpool Cathedral and Hatters HostelBesides Radio City Tower, Liverpool's skyline consist of the historical Liverpool Cathedral (101m), the futuristic Metropolitan Cathedral (82m) and in Albert Dock you find the "Three Graces", 3 significant beautiful landmark buildings in Albert Dock; Royal Liver Building from 1911 is the tallest (99m) and most famous one. Port of Liverpool Building and Cunard Building are the other ones. In Albert Dock you also find the 60m high ferris wheel Liverpool Wheel. The skyline of Liverpool has been booming recently. In the North end of the city centre, you find a new Central Business District (CBD) where a construction of highrises and small skyscrapers have appeared recently, many with interesting shapes. They have all been built in the 2000s, and transformed the skyline of Liverpool. The tallest buildings are the Beetham Tower West from 2007 (40 floors, Liverpool's tallest building) and Beetham Tower from 2004 (27 floors). Alexandra Tower, Unity Residential and 1 Princes Dock are other significant residential highrises from the mid 2000s in the area, and New Hall Place is an older terracotta coloured building from 1974. A wide boulevard, partly called the Strand, separates the business district from Albert Dock. The historic Our Lady and St Nicholas Church stands along the Strand. SkyHaus, two twin 29-storey residential towers, are u/c and will be among the 3 tallest buildings in the city. St John's Beacon is the high circular observation of Radio City Tower, Liverpool's second tallest tower (tallest if you count the antenna). The radio tower is 125m tall to the roof, 148m to the top of the antenna, and was built in 1965. It is situated in the heart of the city centre, right next to Clayton Square, Williamson Square and Lime Street Station. The observation deck is open to public, so it is the best spot to watch Liverpool from above and take photos. 1969-99 there was a revolving restaurant in St John's Beacon. The tower stands next to Clayton Square, where you find a mall and some nice pubs. Visit its own section here. In the outskrirts you find lots of ugly 60s modernist so called "commie blocks" with around 15 floors each. The views below are taken from the outdoor terrace of the Central Library, that is futuristic on the inside and neo-classical on the outside, from near the foot of the Liverpool Anglican Cathedral and from the window of my room at the Hatters Hostel, centrally sitauated on Mt. Pleasant near Lime St Station. Some of the skyline views are also from the new Central Business District in the North end of the city centre.
|