Castle Market photo © Copyright David Dixon and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence. |
But I certainly will.
I'll miss it for three reasons.
One was that I have happy childhood memories of it. I got my first ever box of Lego there, from a stall that had a Lego model of Queen Elizabeth as its centrepiece. I got a Dalek money box from there - possibly from the same stall. I also got a machine gun (admittedly not a real one) from the market, and a banjo. Truly it was a place of many and magical delights for a child.
Secondly, in the good old days it had a pet shop in one of the units that lined the building's ground floor exterior. That shop's downstairs holds no great memories for me but the upstairs had goldfish and snakes. No trip to town was complete without a trip to see the snakes.
The other reason is that it's a building that makes no sense at all. So random is its exterior that it's impossible to close your eyes and imagine walking round the outside of it. It's like a whole bunch of different buildings have collided with each other through some process of continental drift.
Likewise with its oddly labyrinthine interior that left you with the feeling you could roam it every hour of every day of your life and somehow still never fully know it. There'd always be some nook, some cranny, you'd never before encountered. That might not have it a sensible design for a market building but it did mean it was impossible to get bored by it.
I assume it's a truly unique building because I can't believe anyone would ever have been daft enough to build another market anything like it but, of course, that means the complexity and randomness that made it a bizarre design for a market also made it seem oddly special.
2 comments:
My abiding memory of Castle Market is that back in the 1970s, just inside one of the entrances to the market was a second hand book shop which also sold Marvel and DC comics. They usually had a small pile of them, generally sold for half the original cover price, regardless of condition. I used to call in regularly to pick up bargains to supplement my collection of new comics, and the stock was always changing. I’ve still got many of the comics I bought there. Occasionally I’ll pull them out to look at them and they remind me of the smells of the market, a mixture coming from all the stalls in there. I wish it were possible to go back there today!
Mick
Hi, Mick. I too remember there being a second hand book and comic shop in the market. I recall a fair amount of its stock showing the water damage that was common in Marvel comics that arrived in Britain in the very early 1970s. Somehow, the water-rippled paper and rusty staples added a sense of authenticity to them.
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