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Catford Centre

134 Rushey Grn, London SE6 4HQ, United Kingdom

Catford Centre
Shopping mall
4
264 reviews
8 comments
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CXWJ+H5 London, United Kingdom
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Monday: 00–24
Tuesday: 00–24
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Darren McKenzie
Darren McKenzie336 days ago
Decent shopping centre with some out door market stalls very nostalgic if your into that thing. There's a great pub located in the centre called the Black Cat.
Al-Hasan Ali
Al-Hasan Ali1 year ago
It's market where you will find most of your home needs. From food to, hygiene, yoga, meat, fish, vegetables, mobile services, clothes and furniture too. The Catford Library moved recently here. Don't forget The Catford Mews is open with desks to work online, to cafes and the Cinema. Dont forget the resturants and banks all around. So there are so many things you can enjoy doing here.
Michael Crawford
Michael Crawford1 year ago
Considering I live in North west London it's quite easy to move around with loads of places for parking,plenty of shops for food shopping & I do like the indoor centre & outside Market..friendly people makes it a bonus
David Thomas Wunderley
David Thomas Wunderley1 year ago
Small selection of essential shops, Tesco, Iceland, poundstretcher, savers, Holland and Barrett, small veg market, Ladbrokes, Card Factory, two charity shops, KFC,
Malcolm “Bucky Ranks” Richards
Malcolm “Bucky Ranks” Richards1 year ago
Planning to take my daughter to the Cinema here. Good for what you might need.
Raymond Amankwah
Raymond Amankwah1 year ago
Excellent cinema, great screens, brilliant food, and phenomenal prices. Well worth the visit.
Jean Mullen
Jean Mullen1 year ago
Lovely space. Beautiful cinema. Just fabulous!
Jeff benjamin
Jeff benjamin2 years ago
Brutalist complex integrated with Milford Tower Estate designed by Owen Luder Partnership (1974)
The unclad concrete, decks and ramps throwing geometric sculptural shapes over street level shopping “alleys.”
Unfortunately a submission here to all the negative stereotypes associated with Brutalism.
Perhaps gritty, gloomy and bare-knuckled but there’s a credible spread of shops and stalls here and the Mews zone a promising pointer to a potential rehabilitation.
Futuristic 1970’s urban design that wilted under the burden of misjudged doctrinal criteria.
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