👍 I like it Skip

Science and Industry Museum

The Science and Industry Museum in Manchester, England, traces the development of science, technology and industry with emphasis on the city's achievements in these fields. The museum is part of the Science Museum Group, a non-departmental public body of the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, having merged with the National Science Museum in 2012.

Rating 4.5
Reviews 8108
👍 I like it Skip

Old Trafford

Old Trafford () is a football stadium in Old Trafford, Greater Manchester, England, and the home of Manchester United. With a capacity of 74,140 seats, it is the largest club football stadium (and second-largest football stadium overall after Wembley Stadium) in the United Kingdom, and the eleventh-largest in Europe.

Rating 4.5
Reviews 6421
👍 I like it Skip

Tatton Park

Tatton Park is an historic estate in Cheshire, England, north of the town of Knutsford. It contains a mansion, Tatton Hall, a medieval manor house, Tatton Old Hall, Tatton Park Gardens, a farm and a deer park of 2,000 acres (8.

Rating 4
Reviews 2731
👍 I like it Skip

The Bridgewater Hall

The Bridgewater Hall is a concert venue in Manchester city centre, England. It cost around £42 million to build in the 1990s, and hosts over 250 performances a year.

Rating 4.5
Reviews 1163
👍 I like it Skip

Heaton Park

Heaton Park is a municipal park in Manchester, England, covering an area of over 600 acres (242. 8 ha).

Rating 4
Reviews 891
👍 I like it Skip

MediaCityUK

MediaCityUK is a 200-acre (81 ha) mixed-use property development on the banks of the Manchester Ship Canal in Salford, Greater Manchester, England. The project was developed by Peel Media; its principal tenants are media organisations and the Quayside MediaCityUK shopping centre.

Rating 4.5
Reviews 711
👍 I like it Skip

O2 Apollo Manchester

The O2 Apollo Manchester (known locally as The Apollo and formerly Manchester Apollo) is a concert venue in Ardwick Green, Manchester, England. It is a Grade II listed building, with a capacity of 3,500 (2,514 standing, 986 seats).

Rating 4
Reviews 648
👍 I like it Skip

Greater Manchester Police Museum

The Greater Manchester Police Museum is a former police station converted into a museum and archives detailing the history of policing in Greater Manchester, England. It was home to Manchester City Police and then its successors Manchester and Salford Police and Greater Manchester Police from 1879 until 1979.

Rating 4.5
Reviews 624
👍 I like it Skip

Piccadilly Gardens

Piccadilly Gardens is a green space in Manchester city centre, England, on the edge of the Northern Quarter. It takes its name from the adjacent street, Piccadilly, which runs across the city centre from Market Street to London Road.

Rating 2.5
Reviews 624
👍 I like it Skip

Manchester Piccadilly Station

Manchester Piccadilly is the principal railway station in Manchester, England. Opened as Store Street in 1842, it was renamed Manchester London Road in 1847 and became Manchester Piccadilly in 1960.

Rating 4
Reviews 533
👍 I like it Skip

Granada Studios

Old Granada Studios (known simply as Granada Studios and previously known as The Manchester Studios) is a television studio complex and events venue on Quay Street in Manchester with the facility to broadcast live and recorded television programmes. The studios were formerly the headquarters of Granada Television and later ITV Granada from 1956 to 2013.

Rating 4.5
Reviews 414
👍 I like it Skip

Chetham's Library

Chetham's Library in Manchester, England, is the oldest free public reference library in the English-speaking world. Chetham's Hospital, which contains both the library and Chetham's School of Music, was established in 1653 under the will of Humphrey Chetham (1580–1653), for the education of "the sons of honest, industrious and painful parents", and a library for the use of scholars.

Rating 4.5
Reviews 383
👍 I like it Skip

Pennington Flash Country Park

Pennington Flash Country Park is a 200-hectare (490-acre) country park located between Lowton and Leigh in Greater Manchester, England.

Rating 4.5
Reviews 362
👍 I like it Skip

Fletcher Moss Park & Botanical Gardens

Fletcher Moss Botanical Garden is in Didsbury, Manchester, England, between the River Mersey and Stenner Woods. The park is named after Alderman Fletcher Moss, who donated the park to the city of Manchester in 1915.

Rating 4.5
Reviews 351
👍 I like it Skip

Museum of Transport Greater Manchester

The Museum of Transport, Greater Manchester aims to preserve and promote the public transport heritage of Greater Manchester in North West England, it is in the Cheetham Hill area of Manchester. .

Rating 4.5
Reviews 347
👍 I like it Skip

Ordsall Hall

Ordsall Hall is a large former manor house in the historic parish of Ordsall, Lancashire, England, now part of the City of Salford, in Greater Manchester. It dates back more than 750 years, although the oldest surviving parts of the present hall were built in the 15th century.

Rating 4.5
Reviews 303
👍 I like it Skip

Lymm Dam

Lymm Dam is the name of a dam and lake in Lymm, Cheshire, England, an inset village in the greenbelt around Warrington. It was created in 1824 by a dam built during the construction of what is now the A56 road, when local inhabitants objected to initial plans for a route through the village centre.

Rating 4.5
Reviews 300
👍 I like it Skip

Manchester Academy

The Manchester Academy is composed of four concert venues, located on the campus of the University of Manchester, in Manchester, England. The four venues are: Academy 1, 2 and 3 and Club Academy.

Rating 4
Reviews 286
👍 I like it Skip

Grappenhall Heys Walled Garden

Grappenhall Heys Walled Garden is a historic walled garden in Grappenhall, Warrington, Cheshire, England. The garden was built by Thomas Parr around 1830 as both a pleasure garden for relaxing strolls and as a kitchen garden to produce fruit, vegetables, and herbs.

Rating 4.5
Reviews 283
👍 I like it Skip

Warrington Museum & Art Gallery

Warrington Museum & Art Gallery is on Bold Street in the Cultural Quarter of Warrington in a Grade II listed building that it shares with the town's Central Library. The Museum and the Library originally opened in 1848 as the first rate-supported library in the UK, before moving to their current premises in 1858.

Rating 4.5
Reviews 274

Join us!

Keep the places you liked for later stored in your account.

Sign up

Twitter for Travelling

Join for free

Wrld is like Twitter but for travelling minded people!

  • Run by nonprofit
  • No ads
  • Best travel resources
  • Sign up

    Top places around

    St. Ann's Square

    (330 reviews)

    View more

    Sale Water Park

    (188 reviews)

    Sale Water Park is a 152-acre (62 ha) area of countryside and parkland including a 52-acre (21 ha) artificial lake in the Metropolitan Borough of Trafford in Greater Manchester, England.

    View more

    Ruskin Museum

    (340 reviews)

    The Ruskin Museum is a small local museum in Coniston, Cumbria, northern England.

    View more

    Fallowfield Loop

    (15 reviews)

    View more

    Windermere Jetty

    (186 reviews)

    The Windermere Ferry is a vehicular cable ferry which crosses Windermere, a lake in the English county of Cumbria.

    View more
    Top