, opened in 1961. It is now known as the Viking Centre. ,
Leeds was an Arndale Centre until 2000. In 1950, Arnold Hagenbach, a baker with a talent for property investment, and Sam Chippendale, an estate agent from
Otley, set up a company called the Arndale Property Trust, the name being a
portmanteau of "Arnold" and "Chippendale". Prior to developing a string of large shopping centres, Arndale initially started to build new stretches of high streets as canopied shopping parades in a variety of small towns across the North of England as well as suburban centres. These early developments introduced large format shop units to post-war town centres in need of regeneration that suited the growth of growing businesses such as Woolworths and Marks and Spencer. Developments were often in conjunction with local councils to deliver new infrastructure such as roads or markets. The trust purchased
Bradford's Victorian
Swan Arcade in 1954, with the intention of
demolishing it and developing a new shopping centre, but it took eight years before leases expired and building work could commence, so in the meantime it developed a site in
Jarrow,
County Durham, which became the first Arndale Centre when it opened in 1961. Its trademark Viking statue, built by the Trust, was unveiled on 17 February 1962. Arndale's first office was in Wakefield, West Yorkshire and moved to offices in Bradford in 1964 in the then-new Arndale House When the
Wandsworth Arndale opened in 1971, it was the largest indoor shopping space in Europe. The largest Arndale Centre built was
Manchester Arndale. It was redeveloped from 1996, after being badly damaged in an
IRA bombing, and the centre has been owned by
Prudential since December 1998. ==Criticism==