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Mapping Manchester
Cartographic Stories of the City
Exhibition catalogue edited by Martin Dodge and Chris Perkins
Geography, School of Environment and Development
The University of Manchester
Contents
About the exhibition 3
Exhibition acknowledgements 5
Cabinet 1: The map makers 6
Cabinet 2: The car and the city 8
Cabinet 3: Public transport 10
Cabinet 4: City of industry 12
Cabinet 5: Wealth and poverty 14
Cabinet 6: The moral city 16
Cabinet 7: Mapping the future city 18
Cabinet 8: Leisure and pleasure 20
Cabinet 9: The hydraulic city 22
Cabinet 10: Bird’s eye views of the city 24
Panel 1: Mapping Manchester by cartographic scale 26
Panel 2: Mapping Manchester by cartographic theme 27
Panel 3: Mapping Manchester through time 28
Panel 4: Mapping Manchester by changing cartographic design 29
PC display 1: Population map for Greater Manchester 30
PC display 2: Virtual model of Manchester city centre 31
Piccadilly Gardens model 32
Listing of exhibition items 33
Mapping Manchester epilogue 38
2009
• People behind the map, focusing upon contrasts in • Sanitary infrastructure to improve the health of
commercial mapping of Manchester over a two citizens is examined via maps of water supply,
hundred year period. public baths and sewage systems.
• The role of mapping in foretelling developments in • Changing moralities in the city is considered
road and public transport networks. through representations of disease and drinking.
• Manchester as an industrial powerhouse and • The pleasures of mapping is brought to life in
commercial centre, looking at the Ship Canal and terms of visitors’ guides to Belle Vue Zoo and
Trafford Park. Pleasure Gardens, now no longer in existence.
• Mapping contrasts between rich and poor housing • A series of display boards also highlight the
in the city – through social surveys such as Richard different techniques employed by professional
Bastow’s map and the changing built environment cartographers to map the city. These displays
of Hulme. examine change over time, scale, thematic
content and design.
We hope this exhibition will encourage you to visit Manchester’s rich map
collections and to explore for yourself the changing cartographic stories of the city.
The exhibition has been curated by Martin Dodge and Chris Perkins who work as lecturers in Geography in the
School of Environment and Development at the University of Manchester. It builds upon a longstanding research
interest in the many roles that maps play in society.
Detail from Goad Insurance Plan of Manchester, From John Heywood’s Pictorial Map of Manchester
book 1, vol. 1, 1886 (Courtesy of Digital Archives) and Salford, 1886 (Courtesy of Chetham’s Library)
5
Exhibition acknowledgements
Many items in the exhibition have been generously loaned by the Manchester
Archives and Local Studies Library. We are most grateful to Helen Lowe
and Michael Powell of these two institutions for their assistance with all
our enquiries.
The exhibition would not have been possible without the graphical wizardry of Nick Scarle in the Cartographic
Unit of the School of Environment and Development, University of Manchester.
We should also like to thank the following for all their help with other loans and for the production of exhibition
materials: Andrew Taylor; Richard Brook, Manchester School of Architecture; Alex Singleton, University College,
London; Richard Dean, Canalmaps Archive; Karl Hennermann and Nigel Lawson, University of Manchester;
Simon Mabey and Charles Edwards, ARUP; Peter Davenport, Digital Archives; Jon Davies, ICP Framing Ltd;
and Morag Robson, who has the keys to the map cabinets!
We are grateful to Rylands Library staff Donna Pope, Françoise Sullivan, Nina Main and Janet Woolwark for
responding so helpfully to our assorted enquiries.
For varied and intellectual discussions formulating the exhibition we would like to acknowledge, in particular,
Paul Hindle, Bob Barr, Terry Wyke and Brian Robson.
Lastly, thanks are also due to sterling work of Jacqui Fortnum and Jim Duff at Rylands Library, Deansgate for
putting the exhibition together.
Design by Epigram
www.epigram.co.uk
Sponsors
The exhibition and the events programme has been generously supported by:
• Manchester Geomatics
• Manchester Geographical Society
• Laing O’Rourke
• ARUP
• John McAslan & Partners
6
The first large-scale mapping of Manchester was carried out by William Green, who surveyed the city
towards the end of the 1780s. At this date map-making was an expensive and risky enterprise. It
involved laborious surveying followed by the engraving of copper plates. Maps were printed from
these and sold to a limited, wealthy, audience. Cartographers used whatever information they could
acquire, sometimes through the wholesale copying of other people’s maps and surveys. Commercial
success for map-makers often depended less on accuracy and currency than on getting the map out to
the market first.
Charles Laurent managed to get access to Green’s survey, and issued a smaller scale map of Manchester
before Green was able to publish his large-scale map. Yet in many respects Laurent’s map can be
regarded as an inferior design, albeit a more successful publication.
7
The basis for Taylor’s maps is provided by large-scale Ordnance Survey plans. He supplements this ‘raw’
data with a rigorous ground survey, recording changing land use and business names. By focusing on
the commercial core of the city, he can publish the map at a larger scale than commercial, street-finding
alternatives, providing greater detail such as the location of Sam’s Chop House on Back Pool Fold, or the
waterfall in Millennium Square. Print runs are sufficient to sell out in two or three years, by which time
a new revision has been undertaken by Taylor.’
Excerpt from Manchester City Centre, Andrew Taylor, Sixth Edition 2008
This detail highlights the commercial core of the city, with contrasting land-use indicated by a striking use of colour.
(John Rylands University Library Map Collection)
8
The map displayed here is the triumphal product of the South-East Lancashire and North-East Cheshire
Area Highway Engineering Committee. The flagship representation of their 1962 Highway Plan set forth
the need for numerous road building schemes deemed essential once funds became available. It
symbolises the hopes of the early 1960s that visionary planning could, through scientific analysis,
improve the functioning of roads and thus the efficiency of the city region. Much of this grand vision
was never realised, although some key aspects of the inner and outer ring roads have come to pass,
albeit in a the piecemeal fashion. What has become the M60 orbital motorway took until 2000 to realise.
9
The issue of road congestion on key routes was a focus of the SELNEC report and has become
progressively more severe in subsequent decades. A bold scheme for a congestion charge to ‘encourage’
drivers off the roads was recently advanced by the Association of Greater Manchester Authorities as part
of a package of transport investment. The schematic above, on the back of a promotional leaflet, tried
to explain when and where drivers would be charged, along with other key elements of public transport
provision. The referendum over the scheme provoked a vigorous campaign from supporters and
opponents alike. The public across Greater Manchester voted strongly against the congestion charge
in December 2008. It has been suggested that this rejection partly reflected the positioning of charging
points. Taking the charging zone out as far as the M60 meant many key facilities and businesses, such
as the Trafford Centre, fell within the zone.’
Public transport
Most people in Manchester move around the city using public transport.
Changes in network patterns have been mapped out over the last century and
a half. Some of these maps promote the effectiveness of bus, train and tram
routes and stations across Manchester. Others emphasise a more practical use
and are designed to help passengers find their way. Policy makers have also
created mapping to help them monitor passenger numbers, travel times, and to
plan where future lines need to be developed. Large-scale surveys of stations,
tramways, or railway lines conducted at different times reveal a fascinating level
of historical detail about the local significance of public transport to the city.
11
Contemporary mapping
of public transport
Public transport continues to evolve in response to government policy, changing
demands and available funding. Not all proposals come to fruition: Manchester
still has no underground railway despite the various schemes put forward over
the last hundred years. Bus routes proliferate across the city, and trams returned
in the 1990s with Metrolink offering new connections into the city centre. Older
networks survive amidst the forward planning. Mapping continues to promote
the competitive advantage of the networks, chart their use and guide travellers
across the city.
City of industry
Manchester is a city of industry – a landscape of factories and warehouses
developed over the last one hundred and sixty years. The changing fortunes
of these industries have been captured in a range of different site plans,
promotional displays and specialised maps.
At the heart of the industrial metropolis lay the Manchester Docks and Trafford Park Industrial Estate.
Developing from late 1890s as a zone for manufacturing industry, by the 1930s Trafford Park had grown
into a sprawl of factories, warehouses and chemical plants – as laid out in the eye-catching promotional
map on display in this case. The patches in green indicate available sites for new factories. The map also
illustrates the importance of transportation – detailing systems of railways, roads and canals. The
number of wharves and depots clearly illustrates that Manchester’s commercial success depended as
much on distribution as production.
Directly across the Manchester Ship Canal from Trafford Park lay the docks and warehouse complexes.
This hub of commercial shipping is captured in the detailed nineteenth-century bird’s-eye view. The old
Manchester Racecourse is also clearly visible in this drawing. By 1905 it had been destroyed to make way
for Dock No. 9. Also prominent in the foreground is the large grain store, shown in greater detail in the
Goad plan.
13
Reproduced from Port of Manchester: Illustrated History of the Manchester Ship Canal,1708-1901
(John Rylands University Library, OLD/6/21/4)
Concerted efforts from social reformers to improve the housing of the poor can be seen in the
cartographic results of their surveys. Richard Bastow’s survey in the late 1880s mapped out the age of
housing as part of a sanitary campaign, and in 1904 a report on housing conditions, produced by The
Citizens’ Association of Manchester, included a detailed map of housing quality. The areas of worst
housing were shaded in dark colours, and the map shows a cluster which almost completely encircles
the commercial core of the city.
From the mid-nineteenth century private estates of substantial suburban villas were constructed, away
from the poverty and crime of the inner neighbourhoods, for the affluent beneficiaries of Manchester’s
industrial prosperity. An example of these developments can be seen in the sales map for the Oaks
Estate, planned in 1843. In its bucolic design, individual houses are arranged in their own wooded
grounds with curving driveways. The area of Oaks Estate is now occupied by the, not quite so elite,
Owens Park student halls of residence of the University of Manchester!
15
Re-housing in Hulme
The story of social housing in Manchester is clearly illustrated by the inner city
neighbourhood of Hulme, which has undergone a sequence of clearance and
rebuilding programmes over the last eighty years or so. Starting in 1933 a
wholesale scheme was enacted by the City Council to do away with back-to-
back housing. The three areas shaded purple on the plan displayed here were to
be cleared. The page from the schedule shown lists some of the properties to be
demolished – setting out the property owners but generally not the residents
who were to be affected.
Moving forward fifty years, Hulme underwent another round of wholesale housing renewal. This
included the construction of four large multi-storey deck-access blocks known as the Crescents. In the
layout plan the slender curving blocks are situated in parkland with playgrounds and pedestrian routes.
In their 1965 briefing the architects drew inspirational parallels to the Georgian Crescents of Bath for
the design.
The Hulme 5 Crescents soon turned into an archetype of public-housing failure, gaining a reputation for
their poor construction and for a high level of crime. They were demolished in 1991-1992 and replaced
by a new mix of smaller scale housing units and flats.
Folded map included with Hulme 5 Redevelopment: Report on Design, Hugh Wilson and Lewis Womersley, 1965
(Courtesy of Chetham’s Library)
16
The plans shown here depict grandiose proposals for a new Crescent along the northern side of the
Piccadilly esplanade, proposed by William Fairbairn in 1836. The improvements were never made in this
form – contrast the proposals map and perspective drawings with the excerpt from the OS Five Foot
Plan of the city, published in the subsequent decade, which represents the actual layout of buildings at
this time.
19
Reproduced from Plate 72 City of Manchester Plan, prepared by the City Council, 1945
The central area of the Manchester imagined after the Second World War: note the huge roundabout and amusement
centre next to a remodelled Piccadilly.
(John Rylands University Library, R91041)
20
Here you can see an historical example of such mapping – an illustrated guide to the 1887 Manchester
exhibition; a major event in celebration of the Royal Jubilee which was opened by the Prince of Wales.
Purpose built exhibition grounds near Old Trafford included large pavilions showing the range of
manufactured goods and arts of the city. The exhibition also displayed a model of the Ship Canal on
the eve of its construction.
21
Outdoor leisure
Outdoor leisure activities such as walking and running are supported by
specialist mapping. This Orienteering map has been designed and printed by
enthusiasts for the sport. It depicts landscape features of particular interest to
Orienteers, such as density of vegetation, which do not appear on Ordnance
Survey or Internet maps.
Manchester has relatively few green open spaces in the city centre. To increase the opportunities for
recreation there are multi-million pound plans to create a new linear park which will run for 8km
along the River Irwell from Salford Quays down to The Meadows. Once realised this will create new
continuous paths for walking and open up neglected parts of the river course for public enjoyment.
A defining infrastructure project, and the epitome of Victorian engineering arrogance, the Ship Canal
transformed Manchester into a port city when it opened in 1894. The scheme took decades of wrangling
and planning to reach fruition and the landscape view on display here shows the imagined route. It was
used to galvanise public support for this hugely ambitious undertaking. The pastoral idyll implied here
belies the vast scale of the engineering works required to realise this hydraulic dream.
A chain of large reservoirs built by the Manchester Corporation Waterworks in Longdendale valley
between 1848 and 1877 still collects rain-water off the moors for the city. The schematic map of the
system from 1881 ably demonstrates how the city began to reach out towards a wide hinterland
stretching eighteen miles to the Woodhead reservoir. As displayed on the accompanying cross-sectional
view, the system allows water to simply flow down hill under the power of gravity and so feed into
the city.
23
Reproduced from John Frederic La Trobe Bateman’s History and Description of the Manchester Waterworks, 1884
Arriving in the city the fresh water from the Longdendale reservoirs was distributed by network of new mains and
pipes, hidden beneath the surface of streets but made visible in this map.
(John Rylands University Library, 628.1/BAT)
One approach has been to highlight individual buildings, often simulating an elevated viewpoint. These
panoramic maps allow a considerable artistic licence. Some only highlight buildings that are deemed to
be significant, for example John Heywood’s map of the city. Others stress the corporate branding of
Manchester as in the rich ‘logoscape’ on the rooftops of the Cityscape plan. Others alter the size of
certain buildings, to highlight their civic importance, exemplified in the Victorian panorama drawn
by H.W. Brewer, which exaggerates the size of the Town Hall. The artistic element often dominates in
pre-industrial prospects, but also in bird’s-eye view panoramas of the Victorian city.
A second tradition in three-dimensional mapping celebrates a much more scientific approach to the
depiction of the built environment. Aerial photographs can depict a bird’s-eye view with realism and
precision, either as vertical images or as oblique views. When employed interactively these images create
an even more powerful impression of reality displayed, even though their construction may be carefully
orchestrated. ARUP’s Digital Manchester model of the city is the latest attempt to render and animate
the three-dimensional complexity of the city. This can be viewed on the exhibition PC screens.
25
Mapping Manchester by
cartographic scale
• Cartographers work by simplifying the world, reducing complexity to a known geometric scale in
their maps
• At large scales much more detailed depictions of the city can be represented legibly in a map. The
larger the scale the smaller the area of the city that can be seen: for a doubling of scale there is a
consequent quadrupling of the detail that can be mapped, but only a quarter of the area can be
covered
• There is a relationship between scale and what is termed cartographic ‘generalization’: smaller
scale and less detailed maps have to generalize by representing reality more abstractly with
simplified point, line and area symbols. So individual houses along a street are generalized on a
1:50,000 scale map as a grey block
• The most detailed maps appear to be most ‘like’ the world that they represent, but can never
perfectly mimic the places and practices that they depict
Mapping Manchester by
cartographic theme
• Cartographers make propositions about particular aspects of the world: these propositions
typically coalesce into maps that appear to concentrate upon distinct subjects or ‘themes’
• Tightly focused propositions are represented in very different maps of the same area, that tell
singular stories of the city
• Increasing specialization in the mapping industry means there has been an increasing diversity of
mapped themes, reflecting the interests of the funding bodies, or a closely identified market
demand. A military map of Manchester depicts a different city to a land use map, a map of
income distribution, a noise map, a map of postcode boundaries, or a geological map
• Different ‘thematic’ map genres have emerged with strongly specialist market niches and very
different ‘looks’. Some themes are in such widespread use that they subconsciously become
default views of space (e.g. the city in Britain is synonymous with the A-Z map)
Income distribution in Greater Manchester Excerpt from Geological Map of Manchester Noise Map of Manchester
(Courtesy of Alex Singleton, CASA University and Ashton Under Lyme, (Reproduced from
College London) Solid Edition 1994, original scale 1:50,000 http://noisemapping.defra.gov.uk)
(John Rylands University Library Map
Collection)
Excerpt from Manchester Land Use, 1971, Excerpt from Postcode Map, Excerpt from Soviet Military Map of
original scale 1:25,000 original scale 1:100,000 Manchester,
(John Rylands University Library Map (John Rylands University Library Map original scale 1:25,000
Collection) Collection) (John Rylands University Library Map
Collection)
28
Mapping Manchester
through time
• Cartographers must freeze time depicting an ever-changing city at a specified date on their maps
• Yet maps are not instant snapshots, they emerge from a process in which survey, compilation,
printing and publication dates may vary greatly, and where different parts of the same map may
in fact have been compiled at significantly different dates
• Maps of the same place through time will vary as production technologies and designs change
over time, reflecting but also partly constituting, the politics and aesthetic culture of different
time periods
• Despite these problems maps are a valuable source for understanding how places evolve over
time for, for example the changing built form around the Rylands Library shown here
Mapping Manchester by
changing cartographic design
• Cartographers are able to skilfully manipulate the design of a map to target it at different
markets or clients
• The same place, at the same time and scale, can be represented in radically different ways simply
by altering the design elements of the map
• Colours, fonts and lettering, line style, point symbolization and the degree of generalization can
all be changed to affect a different impression, from a ‘scientific’ look to a ‘playful’ feel
• The holistic combination of these design elements is read by map users who are able to
appreciate layout, visual structure, hierarchy and notions of figure and ground relationships.
Everyone is able to recognise and appreciate a well designed map
There are around 2.5 million people living in Greater Manchester. Mapping
population distribution is one way to make sense of the complex social
geographies of the region. In this model detailed census data has been used
to calculate resident population density, which is then mapped as ‘height’.
The taller the area, the more people live there in a greater geographic
concentration. When plotted, the result is a stepped-surface map that can be
drawn in pseudo three-dimensional form. This can be animated by flying a
virtual camera around it.
Colour coding is used to indicate different categories of residential population density according to the scale
shown here. Darker reds represent areas with a higher number of residents (measured in people per square
hectare). Geographical context is given by the addition of motorways and key roads.
The pattern of varying residential population density across the region clearly picks out
the core towns and some their sub-centres. The most prominent are Bolton, Oldham
and Stockport. However, the real peaks of population are right in the city centre. The
very highest population densities are typically single blocks of flats – the ‘tallest’ is a
University of Manchester student hall of residence on Granby Row. The flattest areas
have little resident population although this does not mean they are empty or
undeveloped. Many are business areas, industrial sites and retail parks which have a
large daily influx of people.
Digital Manchester is
probably the most
comprehensive virtual
model of the city
currently available. It
has a large number of
potential uses in terms
planning reviews, public
communication and
evaluating the visual
impact of new
buildings. The model
can also be easily
updated to
accommodate the
changing cityscape.
Animation of Digital
Manchester courtesy of
Simon Mabey and
Charles Edwards, ARUP.
32
This model was made by ARUP to visualise the design for a radical rebuilding of Piccadilly Gardens to create a very
different feel. The scheme was realised in time for 2002 Commonwealth Games.
(Courtesy of Charles Edwards of ARUP, Manchester)
33
Listing continued
• Brochure cover reproduced from Metrolink: Light Rail in Greater Manchester, Greater Manchester
Passenger Authority and Executive, 1991
(John Rylands University Library, A205834)
• Network statistic map reproduced from Transport Statistics: Greater Manchester, 2005
(Greater Manchester Local Transport Plan, www.gmltp.co.uk)
• Future transport networks
(Greater Manchester Passenger Transport Executive, www.gmpte.com)
• City-centre bus map, 2009
(John Rylands University Library Map Collection)
Listing continued
• Two illustrations reproduced from Hulme 5 Redevelopment: Report on Design, Hugh Wilson
and Lewis Womersley, 1965
(Courtesy of Chetham’s Library)
• Contemporary Hulme mapped by Ordnance Survey Landline, 2006
(Courtesy of EDINA Digimap, www.edina.ac.uk)
Listing continued
• City of Manchester Plan, prepared by the City Council, 1945
(John Rylands University Library, R91041)
• Piccadilly Gardens in 2009 mapped by Ordnance Survey MasterMap
(Courtesy of EDINA Digimap, www.edina.ac.uk)
Listing continued
Cabinet 10: Bird’s eye views of the city
• Cityscape Map, 1994
(John Rylands University Library Map Collection)
• Reader’s Digest City Walks, undated
(John Rylands University Library Map Collection)
• Manchester Mega Photo postcard, Aidan O’Rourke, www.aidan.co.uk, 2008
(Courtesy of Martin Dodge)
• Vertical aerial photograph of Manchester City Centre, 2006
(Courtesy of The GeoInformation Group and Landmap, htttp://landmap.mimas.ac.uk)
• Pictorial Map of Manchester and Salford, John Heywood, 1886
(Courtesy of Chetham’s Library)
• Excerpt from Pictorial Map of Manchester and Salford, John Heywood, 1886
(Courtesy of Chetham’s Library)
• Excerpt from of A Bird’s-Eye View of Manchester In 1889
(Courtesy of ICP Framing Ltd, Ashton under Lyne, www.icpframing.co.uk)
Mapping Manchester
Time Zone Map,1914
This map, produced as part
of transport policy report,
details how long it took get
by tram-car from different
suburbs to Piccadilly
or the Exchange.
(Courtesy of Manchester
City Archives and Local
Studies Library)