Industry Huddersfield is a manufacturing town, despite the university being the largest employer. Historically the town produced woollen textiles. This area of business, along with the chemical and engineering industries that emerged to support the manufacture of textiles, was the basis of the town's nineteenth and early twentieth century prosperity. The number of people who work in textiles has declined greatly, but the surviving companies produce large quantities of
woollen products with little labour. The town is home to textile, chemical and engineering companies, including Brook Motors Ltd founded by Ernest Brook in 1904. Against conventional wisdom, he started making
alternating current electric motors, and he did this in one room with two assistants and starting capital of just £300. On its 50th anniversary in 1954, it employed more than 2,000 people and, with Ernest's sons Frank and Jack in charge, was the largest exclusive producer of AC motors in the world, with had a turnover of £4,500,000. That same year Brook Motors Ltd operated 10 factories in Huddersfield, its biggest being Empress Works on St Thomas's Road, and opened one at Barugh Green, Barnsley. Other local manufacturers are
Cummins Turbo Technologies, founded in 1952 as Holset by Messrs. Holmes and Croset. (turbochargers), David Brown Gear systems (industrial gearing), Huddersfield Fine Worsteds (textiles), Taylor & Lodge (textiles), C & J Antich (textiles), Syngenta AG (
agro-chemicals),
Pennine Radio Limited (
electronics transformers and sheet
metalworking) and a large number of niche manufacturers, such as Dual Seal Glass (maker of spandrel glass panels) and Ellis Furniture (producer of kitchen and bathroom furniture). Huddersfield is home to Andrew Jones Pies, a regional award-winning pie-maker, and
Mamas and Papas, a manufacturer and retailer of prams, pushchairs and related items and specialist pneumatics supplier Shelley Automation Ltd.
Health Huddersfield Royal Infirmary is in
Lindley. Medical services are split between there and the
Calderdale Royal Hospital at
Salterhebble, near
Halifax.
Kirkwood Hospice provides care for the
terminally ill, and is dependent on donations and charitable gifts. Princess Royal Hospital provided
maternity facilities until the risks of not being able to get an ambulance to
A&E in the event of complications were judged to outweigh the benefits of specialist service provision. It now functions as a day clinic,
family planning consultation centre and
GUM Clinic. A decision to move most maternity services provided by the Calderdale & Huddersfield NHS Foundation Trust to the Calderdale Royal Hospital ended the provision in 2007, despite strong local opposition. The campaign was led by
Save Huddersfield NHS which elected a councillor, Dr Jackie Grunsell in the Crosland Moor ward. In January 2016 plans were announced to close the A&E department of Huddersfield Royal Infirmary and have all emergency cases go to Calderdale Royal instead. This sparked uproar in local communities as it would mean journeys from some areas of over 40 minutes to and from the hospital assuming that the main road into Halifax was not congested, as it frequently is. The former
St. Luke's Hospital in
Crosland Moor provided mostly
geriatric and
psychiatric care. It closed in 2011 and the land was sold to a developer; it is now home to Fitzwilliam Grange, a housing estate.
Platform 1 is a charity established in 2018; it provides a space and advice for men struggling with mental health.
Entertainment The
Lawrence Batley Theatre, opened in 1994, in what was once the largest
Wesleyan Chapel in the world. It presents dance, drama, comedy, music and exhibitions and is the base for Full Body and The Voice, a company concerned with the integration of disabled people into mainstream theatre. The
John Smith's Stadium (formerly the Galpharm Stadium and Alfred McAlpine Stadium), is a multi-use sports stadium with a gym, swimming pool, spa and offers sporting classes. It is home to Huddersfield Giants and Huddersfield Town. Adjacent the stadium is an
Odeon cinema (formerly UCI). There are many pubs, restaurants and night clubs. The oldest pub is
The Parish, trading since 1720.
Shopping Huddersfield has a large and diverse retail shopping area, enclosed within the town's ring road, compared with other towns of its size. There are three shopping areas:
Kingsgate, The Packhorse Precinct and
The Piazza Centre. The Piazza offers an outdoor shopping mall near the public library, with a grassed area, used for relaxation and events throughout the year such as entertainment, international markets and iceskating in winter. Through the adjacent Market Arcade is a covered market hall, which has listed building status, due in part to its distinctive roof formed by
hyperbolic paraboloids. It is adjacent to the town hall and public library. An open market trades next to
Tesco, on the other side of the town centre. The town centre is home to several national high street retailers and chain stores. There are also a variety of small specialist and independent shops, many in the three-storey Victorian shopping arcade, Byram Arcade, on street, Westgate. However, over the last decade, many shops have closed down causing a general decline of the town centre. Most notability, the closure of
British Home Stores (BHS) in 2016 left a large shopping unit empty in The Piazza Centre. In 2019,
Marks & Spencer announced 17 closures within the UK, including the Huddersfield store. ==Community and culture==