The highly anticipated opening of Native Manchester at Ducie Street Warehouse is scheduled for September 2019.
This innovative new multi-use apartment hotel in Manchester’s historic Northern Quarter will be Native’s biggest and most ambitious opening to date, spread across six floors of a former Victorian cotton warehouse close to Manchester Piccadilly Station.
The Grade II listed building has been re-imagined by David Archer of Archer Humphreys Architects, the firm behind Chiltern Firehouse and the new Standard Hotel, London. 166 high quality apartments will provide stylish city centre accommodation with unrivalled space and facilities for guests, including eight luxury penthouse apartments each with their own private outdoor terrace.
Inside, wide cast-iron columns and exposed brickwork contrast with warm blues and bright reds in a nod to the building’s industrial heritage. From studios, to two-bedroom deluxe penthouses with magnificent roof terraces, each apartment enjoys city views, a fully equipped kitchen and handpicked 20th century furniture sourced by Conran.
“With over 180,000 square feet of space, this has been an extraordinary opportunity to take one of the great icons of Manchester’s industrial past and turn it into a major cultural and social destination for the city,” says Guy Nixon, founder and CEO of Native.
“We have worked closely with Archer Humphreys to make the most of the original features of the warehouse, preserving the huge glass atrium, the brick arches and thundering iron columns evoking the grandeur of Manchester’s industrial heritage.
“Manchester is such a thriving, culturally rich city and so it seems apt that we are unveiling the new blue print for Native here, one where we’ve brought together innovative independent F&B and fitness operators with whom Native can offer creative spaces for everyone, guests and Mancunians alike, to follow their own path at Ducie Street whether that’s to sleep, work, energise or relax in a welcoming and stylish setting, perfect for those that are culturally curious and mindful of design.”
Also moving into Ducie Street Warehouse, is independently operated CULTUREPLEX – a ground floor social hub from leading London restaurateurs David Waddington and Pablo Flack.
CULTUREPLEX will include a restaurant (Bistrotheque), a mini cinema, bar, coffee counter and flexible events and workspaces, creating a unique community centre and all day hangout.
Award-winning fitness brand, BLOK will also be opening their first studio outside of London. Set across three beautifully designed studios and led by Manchester’s top instructors, classes at BLOK will run from 6am until 9pm.