It used to be the Co-op in the 1970s. It was a large carpeted department store that had fashions, white goods, shoes, records, clock and watch repairs, cosmetics, hardware etc, a fairly big co-op supermarket, and a lovely tearoom called the Tartan Rooms upstairs, overlooking the street below. I worked there in the fashions and record departments. Loved it. Great memories. It was badly bomb damaged a few times during the troubles.
@@georgebarnes8163 I never was around for the old co op they moved it to a smaller buliding then it closed when I was around but as someone who used to go to the flagship I don't know why anything went there it was bland barely had anyone in it hopefully when it comes back it will be better
@@Ieatpastaday The Co Op got blew up big time, anything is better than it is now. I was working across the direct road at the time bomb went off fixing a roof, no-one even knew we were there.
I was born and bred in Bangor, and the Flagship used to be very popular. It even had a car-bootsale in the multi-storey carpark near the final few years! Why isn't it still running??.... Ask the council and owners.... too high of rates, no business could survive!Most Businesses left to relocate to the out of town "Bloomfield shopping centre"!
Not surprised to see the state of the centre to be honest. Poundworld was the very last tenant to shut its doors but bizarrely, the whole complex remained open. No security, and hardly no cleaners in it. Remember getting a few things in that poundworld, then days later it was shut! Was great to see inside there after all those years!!! Brilliant vid. 👍
Burger king and a small store downstairs where the last I was working in burgerking when we got the call that flagship shut the place was empty near the end we got about 20 customers a day which isn't really much surprised we stayed open but the job was easy enough spent most my time eating in the office just waiting to see a customer on the cctv
@@danstill6772 sad to see the place go like that. I remember going to it once back in 2018 after a holiday in Spain and remembering that the Poundland had like 2 workers in it. I went to the food hall upstairs and it was depressing. Again sad to see it go. I wonder what will happen to the castle mall in Antrim Town if things go the same way
Just found and started watching. I want to say thank you. You leave the areas as you find them. Even though they are abandoned, it is still nice to see just a walk thru. Sad that people have to go thru and destroy and trash them. So a big thank you..
This is so sad. I was in this place quite a few times when the kids were young and they always insisted on getting lunch in Burger King before heading out to the sea front. We still have a big mirror over our fireplace that we bought in the Flagship years ago. Thanks so much for posting this.
@@WideWorldOfUrbex all I know is that the new owner has plans to refurbish it and roepen it as a mall but I've no idea how tar on this is as I live about 30 miles from Bangor and haven't been up there in the last few years.
Bangor Co-op to this day in my 27 years is still the biggest co-op I've ever been in, having been to many towns and cities across the UK. Back when co op used to be a 'proper' supermarket in the 90s.
So strange seeing this. Haven't been there in many years, but it's all flooding back to me remembering my childhood going round it. Christ tonight that wasn't today or yesterday. Great video.
You guy's are an inspiration 🙌 I started urbex over 11 years ago and at the time hardly no one was covering it.. in thr way you do. I found you when you had about 10 subs.. and you were about 14. Your info, history coverage and dedication is outstanding.. you always managed to get super shots
Someone said to me once that....'Life is something that gets in the way when you're trying to get on with something else' and that is so true and why I've not watched any of you're vids for a coupla months now but having just watched this one it made me realise just how much I've missed them and enjoy them. Way'da go for what you do and thank you for taking the time to edit and share.
Nice video! Ethel Austin went into administration in 2013 so that store has been closed for longer than the whole site. Still amazing how they’d let units go to that much ruin when the place was still open.
Thank you for this video, sad to see this close down. Quite a lot of people are favouring the smaller shopping complex or local little shopping centres now, social distancing and people being aware of saving and supporting locally grown etc. The people who own the Malls charge such a high rent, shopkeepers can't afford the overheads and wages of staff anymore. The world is going to see many more places close down sadly. Thanks again 🇦🇺
Seems the landlords are more concerned with squeezing as much out of the shopkeepers as they can before forcing them out onto the streets. Bloody fools. That's why these places keep going under: the landlords just price everyone out of the building. And then they wonder why their mall turns into a ghost town less than a year later. This price gouging happens everywhere: SE Asia, Australia, Canada/US, France, etc.
I loved the Flagship center. I loved Tonic sandwich bar, Mark one fashion store, peacocks and dunnes stores. So sad to see it abandoned like this the life & soul just ripped out of it. The fact that it is still in good enough condition to become a functional business enterprise again while Lesley spouse up bloomfields shopping center while leaving the town centre deprived of life!
Was part of the last people to work here at burgerking in the food court which remained open surprisingly until the centre shut we actually had to get ourselves jumpers because the centre shut off the heating such a shame used to love the place when I was younger
I stopped going to Burger King because the cold drinks weren't cold enough, I used to have to ask the worker to stuff more and more ice into my drink, but it got to the stage where I couldn't be bothered asking anymore so I stopped going.
what years were you working there? you probably saw me lol. my mam used to take me to the burgerking there when i was little after she got back from work on saturdays
@@waxeater112 I didn't work there, I was just a customer. I have a feeling they're going to open it again, the centre was recently sold so it will be interesting to see what the plans are for it.
15:49 The Burger King used to be at Ground Floor to the right at the entrance to the Flagship Centre at the Bottom of Main Street in the 1990s and early 2000s before moving up to the 1st floor in October 2005 along with KFC and Subway
I am looking at this now I am 16 now I am having PTSD from this thank you for bringing a memory back from when me and my dad went to see my uncle who was a vendor for clothes in there.
I’ve got a certain fascination with dead malls. While they have been thing in America we have not really had them this side of the Atlantic as we had dead high streets. But with changing consumer habits I suspect that will be seeing more of them in the UK and Ireland .
Hopefully our local one stays open. It's small but still has a CEX, Poundland, EE + Vodafone + O² stores as well as a few others. Most of the upstairs shops have sadly closed though (Comet, Shoezone, Superdrug) and it has a slightly depressing vibe about it.
Yes, the US doesn't really have town centres like we do, they're more road based than we are and as such there are tons of larger places with plenty of free parking spread out all over the places compared to here where they decided to stick them all in town centres with rubbish access for cars and expensive parking. I know not everyone uses cars, but I feel they'd have been more successful on the outskirts of town.
It's the same thing in the US, stores are closing and no one wants to pay the high rent prices to be located in a mall. Not to mention not many ppl are shopping in these places anymore. I suppose it is sad in some ways, most of us don't like change. But when malls became a thing decades ago, ppl were up in arms about taking business away from the small downtown "mom & pop" stores. 🤷♀️
Heartbreaking to see, I worked in burger king for a few years and also in the cleaners for a few months. Sad to see the state it's in today. Was the centre of our town for decades. Unfortunately the whole town is now dying. Great video, brought back some memories. Almost brings a tear to your eye
Great video, albeit a sad one. Such a same a huge complex like this has gone to wrack and ruin. As has already been mentioned, high business rates probably played a part.
It’s weird seeing it empty, when I walked through it as a kid. Got some memories but I always remember it being on the decline. In the end it just became a glorified bathroom for me, I’d only use it to go to the toilets beside the food courts
Strange how any retail businesses that can take advantage of idleness can thrive but only until a new even simpler format comes along. Indoor shopping centre replaced markets. Large out of town centres killed off town centre malls. Now online shopping is killing those. Each bubble seems to be over quicker the previous bubble
So much like the abandoned malls in the US.. (both large and small malls are closed or are closing) they are replaced by online shopping.. it is very sad,, t was a nice family day to get out of the house.. so sad to see it empty
Ethel Austin/ Au Natural went bust in 2008/9 I never thought I'd see that signage again. Ethel was clothing A N was homewares etc that was actually quite good.
I remember the huge Co-Op store being on this site, then watching this centre being built. It was thriving centre back in the 90s. So sad seeing inside it now. I was in here nearly every day yrs ago. Bangor whole town has gone to pot now ever since charity shops took over. So sad.
We Love this video. It’s so good to see the before and after and a big surprise to see you used clips from our video thanks for linking it it’s so cool
I have never visited this centre but it reminds me so much of thr Galleries in Wigan which you covered in another video. I went only once or twice before it closed and it was sad to see how deserted the place was considering i think it was only built in 1994.
I worked in the pound world from opening for about a year or so and basically lived int he building with friends when I was a teenager on most weekends. I wonder where the cool fortune telling face machine went? I still have memories of it's laugh echoing through the building.
2:26 The car park levels have been reopened on 19th November 2022 as the shopping centre is making a comeback, Level 2 was the only car park where I parked my car in Today when I went to Bangor this afternoon and I remembered when I was a kid when my parents parking the car at the Flagship Car Park when we went shopping or went for a Burger King especially on a rainy day and I used to walk from Level 4 to Level 2 Car Park every time I went to this shopping centre and then in 2012 I became more obsessed with lifts at this shopping centre so I used to ride on them up and down for 12 minutes and then filming it for TH-cam before Levels 3 to 4a car park closed for centre personnel only in April 2013
I used to visit Bangor frequently throughout the 90s, 2000s and believe it or not today (11/07/23). My grandparents and some family still live there. I used to love going into the Flagship there was a great computer games store called Whizz Kids. You could trade in your SNES cartridges. Then we would get groceries from the Co-Op. Then pig out in the food court. Sad to see it has been abandoned. Bangor is not how I remember it at all. Used to be a buzzing town with lots of great shops along the promenade. Sad to see the Windsor hotel is abandoned too. Back to New Zealand for us it is.
Back in the early 2000’s in here used to be packed every weekend when I was a kid then it came to around 2013/14 and it started to die off completely, sad to see, hopefully they make something new in there soon
It seemed to happen over night didn’t it? A Saturday afternoon in the food court and it would be impossible to get a seat. Sitting with groups of your mates with the 99p chicken sandwich’s each so you would be allowed to stay and then just……nothing.
the wall of the car park side facing high street has an interesting facade with large reflective fake windows that cover concrete bricks, to make the whole thing look like a regular building
Man, painful seeing mentionable shopping mall hasn’t aged well left to decaying and it’s shame too as I used to come here in my toddler years up to early adult years…
It seemed that when they put the food court in upstairs, the centre started to decline rapidly, it was around 2005/2006. Burger King used to be on the ground level and that was when the centre was buzzing. I remember sitting in Burger King when it was downstairs and watching people congregating in and out of the entrance of the Flagship.
I worked maintenance in the center for a year, its demise came at the hands of Michael Herbert (KFC franchise owner), he bought the center so he could build apartments at the rear yard, he ran it into the ground increasing rents and making parking minimum £1, he done this with the intention to sell the center onto Eddie Irvine (former F1 driver) who intends to turn it into a hotel/casino, the multi story carpark is to be a karting track.
@@formhubfar not really as I've been around asked a phew ppl the car park is now open to cars And ngl Arcades and Casinos are pretty similar but it's likely to be an arcade as then it will attract more people
I queued outside the music shop overnight to buy boyzone tickets. Must have been around 1996. As i remember it there were about 20 teenage girls and one older lad who was sent out to get tickets for his sisters. Im amazed they let us stay inside the centre overnight. Think me and my mates were the last 3 in before they locked the main doors.
It used to be a sea side town with amusement arcades, fish and chip, burgers, and loads of day trippers and teens hanging about the sea front. Then town planners removed the beach, built a marina for rich folk and people stopped coming. They built the flagship centre, god knows why as footfall had fallen off a cliff due to Marina and it was inevitable the centre couldn’t make money as nobody visited Bangor and traders left the flagship after loosing money and it too closed.
Read in the news today it's just been sold again. The vacant Flagship Centre site in Bangor, County Down, has been sold in a multi-million-pound deal to developers Brookland Property. The shopping centre on Main Street closed its doors in February 2019. Brookland will take possession of the 157,000 sq ft centre and 430-space car park site immediately. Ricky McLarnon, from Brooklands, said that the prime town centre location "is just crying out for regeneration investment". "Our first priority will be to get the car park back into use as soon as possible and we will be making an innovative proposal to Ards and North Down Borough Council imminently," Mr McLarnon said. "As someone who was brought up in Bangor, I remember the Flagship Centre as a vibrant part of the town centre."
another con man who claimed he was penniless not more than a month ago when he failed to repair all the new builds he had sold leaving people out thousands of pounds then he can pay a 6 figure sum for a tip like this.
@@georgebarnes8163 Absolute joker this Ricky --- "The initial ask from Brookland Properties was for £9.1m from the Council to take the Flagship car park on a 50-year lease. This included an offer of a contribution of £1.2m from the developer to provide EV points and improved facilities in other council car parks (it is understood that the centre was purchased by Brookland for £1.8m from the Administrator).
Explore the abandoned burned down house near applewood, Swords in Dublin. Thr basement looks big but I've never been able to get in out of fear of not being able to get back up
Who would want to live in the centre of Bangor, the whole town is an abandoned tip of the place, the walks along the shore are the only attraction the town has left. Not a place worth visiting anymore and best avoided.
this place had free parking from it opened, and 2 yrs before it closed they started charging for parking, so people went to other shops like bloomfields. i honestly think people didnt like their changes and revoked. so much for management skills whoever fked that shop up.
I think it would be interesting to see an analysis of how shopping/retails centers effected the retail sector and what the future is given the emergence of online. My own opinion is that shopping centers will eventually be repurposed, or completely demolished, and become accommodation/residential, there is a greater need for housing, than large shopping complexes.
I remember here for years I had been going there since 2003 and my family spent a lot of time here and in 2019 a few of my mates got kicked out but It didn’t matter much to them because of how dead it is
Bangor council could not manage a chimps tea party, the worst performing council in all of Northern Ireland and also has the highest debts which were in excess of 90 million a couple of years ago , also bear in mind that Bangor is a total tip of place full of demolished buildings and boarded up shops, nothing to attract the public bar a few beach walks.
@@marklittler784 they must do, that would account for Bangor Councils massive debts and why the domestic rates have took a fair hike in the last two years, my rates went up by 24 % yet the services were reduced not enhanced.
Brings back good childhood memories going every weekend and getting a burger king :(
It used to be the Co-op in the 1970s. It was a large carpeted department store that had fashions, white goods, shoes, records, clock and watch repairs, cosmetics, hardware etc, a fairly big co-op supermarket, and a lovely tearoom called the Tartan Rooms upstairs, overlooking the street below. I worked there in the fashions and record departments. Loved it. Great memories. It was badly bomb damaged a few times during the troubles.
The Co-op was a million times better than this lemon, the Flagship was a disaster from the day it opened.
I’m 38, got my ears pierced in the Co 30 years ago. I remember that and the tearoom upstairs. Xox
@@mmc1086 Aw. It was a lovely shop. I loved working there. Fond memories of a lot of the staff too. 😊
@@georgebarnes8163 I never was around for the old co op they moved it to a smaller buliding then it closed when I was around but as someone who used to go to the flagship I don't know why anything went there it was bland barely had anyone in it hopefully when it comes back it will be better
@@Ieatpastaday The Co Op got blew up big time, anything is better than it is now. I was working across the direct road at the time bomb went off fixing a roof, no-one even knew we were there.
Never thought I’d see my own home town on this channel. Very eery I as used to work in there!
@Stormtrooper1488 me n my mates broke one of the cameras by throwing a chair from the foodcourt at it lmao
@Stormtrooper1488 we couldnt get into the bathrooms, didnt really want to either! 🤣
Same I live in Bangor
It's due to be refurbished and opened back up again
@@stevieokie1 wonder how that's going.. lol
As sad as it is to see this shopping centre abandoned, it’s great to see you do videos in Northern Ireland. Love your videos. Very interesting.
I was born and bred in Bangor, and the Flagship used to be very popular. It even had a car-bootsale in the multi-storey carpark near the final few years! Why isn't it still running??.... Ask the council and owners.... too high of rates, no business could survive!Most Businesses left to relocate to the out of town "Bloomfield shopping centre"!
Not surprised to see the state of the centre to be honest. Poundworld was the very last tenant to shut its doors but bizarrely, the whole complex remained open. No security, and hardly no cleaners in it. Remember getting a few things in that poundworld, then days later it was shut!
Was great to see inside there after all those years!!!
Brilliant vid. 👍
Burger king and a small store downstairs where the last I was working in burgerking when we got the call that flagship shut the place was empty near the end we got about 20 customers a day which isn't really much surprised we stayed open but the job was easy enough spent most my time eating in the office just waiting to see a customer on the cctv
@@danstill6772 sad to see the place go like that. I remember going to it once back in 2018 after a holiday in Spain and remembering that the Poundland had like 2 workers in it. I went to the food hall upstairs and it was depressing. Again sad to see it go. I wonder what will happen to the castle mall in Antrim Town if things go the same way
Iceland too
Luckily for the people of Bangor aprently it's opening in 2023 and the car park is already open again may I wish the new flagship luck
It's gone downhill and decayed really, really fast though.
Only closed in 2019
Just found and started watching. I want to say thank you. You leave the areas as you find them. Even though they are abandoned, it is still nice to see just a walk thru. Sad that people have to go thru and destroy and trash them. So a big thank you..
Fascinating. I used to go here as a child. I don't think anyone here would call it a mall. We call them shopping centres. Thanks for sharing.
Never thought I'd see the inside of that Co-Op again. Thanks for posting this.
There was pigeons in it
This is so sad. I was in this place quite a few times when the kids were young and they always insisted on getting lunch in Burger King before heading out to the sea front. We still have a big mirror over our fireplace that we bought in the Flagship years ago. Thanks so much for posting this.
Any idea what’s happened to it now as I am planning a trip to Northern Ireland in June so wondered if this is still there to explore
@@WideWorldOfUrbex all I know is that the new owner has plans to refurbish it and roepen it as a mall but I've no idea how tar on this is as I live about 30 miles from Bangor and haven't been up there in the last few years.
@@andrewnelsondrumcovers1787 Thanxs for the reply I might try my luck there in June worse case just have a day out in Bangor
That must have been when they still had a seafront, instead of that ghastly marina and car park.
11:41 when you see the former shop front of Iceland! I really like old shop signage and design, especially from the 90’s. Thanks for this 👍🏻
That shop was there since the very beginning and they changed nothing lol
I always thought the old iceland signs were better that retro style pretty awful now lol
13:31 that was a co-op, it closed in late 2012 if i recall correctly. i remember getting lost in there when i was little
Bangor Co-op to this day in my 27 years is still the biggest co-op I've ever been in, having been to many towns and cities across the UK. Back when co op used to be a 'proper' supermarket in the 90s.
I live in Bangor thanks for the video, love my town! Come on you Bangers
So strange seeing this. Haven't been there in many years, but it's all flooding back to me remembering my childhood going round it. Christ tonight that wasn't today or yesterday. Great video.
So weird seeing it empty I remember seeing it very busy
My friend and I once got shelter there during a thunderstorm
You guy's are an inspiration 🙌 I started urbex over 11 years ago and at the time hardly no one was covering it.. in thr way you do. I found you when you had about 10 subs.. and you were about 14. Your info, history coverage and dedication is outstanding.. you always managed to get super shots
Someone said to me once that....'Life is something that gets in the way when you're trying to get on with something else' and that is so true and why I've not watched any of you're vids for a coupla months now but having just watched this one it made me realise just how much I've missed them and enjoy them. Way'da go for what you do and thank you for taking the time to edit and share.
Love the Ireland videos - keep them coming 🙌
flagship centre was literally my childhood, my mam was a security guard in there from 2006-2011 before then moving to easons literally up the road
And that's closed down too. A shame as I really liked Eason's.
@@Ludro45 aye same here i used to buy manga in there
@@waxeater112 Yeah, bought some manga and comics in there myself. I miss it.
@@Ludro45 same man, bangors just not the same anymore
easons didn't end well either!
Nice video! Ethel Austin went into administration in 2013 so that store has been closed for longer than the whole site. Still amazing how they’d let units go to that much ruin when the place was still open.
Thank you for this video, sad to see this close down. Quite a lot of people are favouring the smaller shopping complex or local little shopping centres now, social distancing and people being aware of saving and supporting locally grown etc. The people who own the Malls charge such a high rent, shopkeepers can't afford the overheads and wages of staff anymore. The world is going to see many more places close down sadly. Thanks again 🇦🇺
Seems the landlords are more concerned with squeezing as much out of the shopkeepers as they can before forcing them out onto the streets. Bloody fools. That's why these places keep going under: the landlords just price everyone out of the building. And then they wonder why their mall turns into a ghost town less than a year later. This price gouging happens everywhere: SE Asia, Australia, Canada/US, France, etc.
I loved the Flagship center. I loved Tonic sandwich bar, Mark one fashion store, peacocks and dunnes stores. So sad to see it abandoned like this the life & soul just ripped out of it.
The fact that it is still in good enough condition to become a functional business enterprise again while Lesley spouse up bloomfields shopping center while leaving the town centre deprived of life!
Was part of the last people to work here at burgerking in the food court which remained open surprisingly until the centre shut we actually had to get ourselves jumpers because the centre shut off the heating such a shame used to love the place when I was younger
I stopped going to Burger King because the cold drinks weren't cold enough, I used to have to ask the worker to stuff more and more ice into my drink, but it got to the stage where I couldn't be bothered asking anymore so I stopped going.
@@James-4812 aye burger king drinks are pretty shite lol
what years were you working there? you probably saw me lol. my mam used to take me to the burgerking there when i was little after she got back from work on saturdays
@@waxeater112 I didn't work there, I was just a customer. I have a feeling they're going to open it again, the centre was recently sold so it will be interesting to see what the plans are for it.
15:49 The Burger King used to be at Ground Floor to the right at the entrance to the Flagship Centre at the Bottom of Main Street in the 1990s and early 2000s before moving up to the 1st floor in October 2005 along with KFC and Subway
I am looking at this now I am 16 now I am having PTSD from this thank you for bringing a memory back from when me and my dad went to see my uncle who was a vendor for clothes in there.
I don't think you mean PTSD.
@@eadweard. Best way I can describe it since it was 4:27am. Lol
I’ve got a certain fascination with dead malls. While they have been thing in America we have not really had them this side of the Atlantic as we had dead high streets.
But with changing consumer habits I suspect that will be seeing more of them in the UK and Ireland .
Hopefully our local one stays open. It's small but still has a CEX, Poundland, EE + Vodafone + O² stores as well as a few others. Most of the upstairs shops have sadly closed though (Comet, Shoezone, Superdrug) and it has a slightly depressing vibe about it.
Yes, the US doesn't really have town centres like we do, they're more road based than we are and as such there are tons of larger places with plenty of free parking spread out all over the places compared to here where they decided to stick them all in town centres with rubbish access for cars and expensive parking. I know not everyone uses cars, but I feel they'd have been more successful on the outskirts of town.
Built as dreams of the future
left as dreams of the past
That saying goes for the whole town (well, now city), not just the flagship centre!
Got such a sad nostalgic feeling from this I Rmbr this shopping centre being so lively when I was a kid
It's the same thing in the US, stores are closing and no one wants to pay the high rent prices to be located in a mall. Not to mention not many ppl are shopping in these places anymore. I suppose it is sad in some ways, most of us don't like change. But when malls became a thing decades ago, ppl were up in arms about taking business away from the small downtown "mom & pop" stores. 🤷♀️
Wow that peakocks signs is old interesting to see how the sign has changed into what were used to seeing nowadays
Top upload again guys 😎
so sad it was a great place to shop loved it thank you for showing
The size of that super market is just incredible.
Spent most of my college breaks here, and that was just in 2016. And I spent many childhood days out visiting here along with the seafront
I've fond memories of being here with my dad and mum when we'd take a trip down to Bangor from Belfast shocking to see it like this now.
Heartbreaking to see, I worked in burger king for a few years and also in the cleaners for a few months. Sad to see the state it's in today. Was the centre of our town for decades. Unfortunately the whole town is now dying. Great video, brought back some memories. Almost brings a tear to your eye
Thanks for this guys, i remember once going into here when it was open.
Great video, albeit a sad one. Such a same a huge complex like this has gone to wrack and ruin. As has already been mentioned, high business rates probably played a part.
Sorta reminded me of the abandoned Bargate centre in Southampton - that was a proper time capsule, with remnants of an internet café, SEGA Arcade etc.
It’s weird seeing it empty, when I walked through it as a kid. Got some memories but I always remember it being on the decline. In the end it just became a glorified bathroom for me, I’d only use it to go to the toilets beside the food courts
Strange how any retail businesses that can take advantage of idleness can thrive but only until a new even simpler format comes along.
Indoor shopping centre replaced markets. Large out of town centres killed off town centre malls. Now online shopping is killing those. Each bubble seems to be over quicker the previous bubble
Adapt or die might be the only rule from now on
Great video I love exploring these abandoned malls!
Awesome explore! Keep them coming!
I live in Northern Ireland and didn't even know that had closed.
So much like the abandoned malls in the US.. (both large and small malls are closed or are closing) they are replaced by online shopping.. it is very sad,, t was a nice family day to get out of the house.. so sad to see it empty
Newtownards shopping centre will be the next to go, it now has a 50% occupancy and dropping every month, another one on deaths door.
I sat in that wee muffin coffee shop many times 😀!!
I worked here in 2005/2006, mad and sad to see it like this.
I did security in this place for a long time I know every corner , brings back some memories, sad
Four days after you posted this video, the flagship centre was sold.
Ethel Austin/ Au Natural went bust in 2008/9 I never thought I'd see that signage again. Ethel was clothing A N was homewares etc that was actually quite good.
aye i was wondering when it closed bc i didnt remember it being open at all n i practically grew up in the flagship
I've lived in Northern Ireland all my life but have never been to Bangor, looks like they have their own Rolling Acres Mall I see. Nice tour btw 🙂
Ya don't know wot your missing lol charity shop central I call it,has a few nice parks etc though
we do unfortunatley
@@waynecrothers2012 nah mate its a fucking dump
Loved this explore, great vid 👍
I remember the huge Co-Op store being on this site, then watching this centre being built. It was thriving centre back in the 90s. So sad seeing inside it now. I was in here nearly every day yrs ago. Bangor whole town has gone to pot now ever since charity shops took over. So sad.
We Love this video. It’s so good to see the before and after and a big surprise to see you used clips from our video thanks for linking it it’s so cool
Scary to see so much decay in such a short time. Loved the editing which showed the centre in the past. Great vid, many thanks.
Great video.....remember shopping in the centre many moons ago...
I have never visited this centre but it reminds me so much of thr Galleries in Wigan which you covered in another video. I went only once or twice before it closed and it was sad to see how deserted the place was considering i think it was only built in 1994.
Great video as always, as with many shopping centres high rents may have played a part in this centres demise.
Government business rates are a big problem.
next to go will be Halton Lea, formley Runcorn Shopping City as half the shops there have closed
I worked in the pound world from opening for about a year or so and basically lived int he building with friends when I was a teenager on most weekends. I wonder where the cool fortune telling face machine went? I still have memories of it's laugh echoing through the building.
2:26 The car park levels have been reopened on 19th November 2022 as the shopping centre is making a comeback, Level 2 was the only car park where I parked my car in Today when I went to Bangor this afternoon and I remembered when I was a kid when my parents parking the car at the Flagship Car Park when we went shopping or went for a Burger King especially on a rainy day and I used to walk from Level 4 to Level 2 Car Park every time I went to this shopping centre and then in 2012 I became more obsessed with lifts at this shopping centre so I used to ride on them up and down for 12 minutes and then filming it for TH-cam before Levels 3 to 4a car park closed for centre personnel only in April 2013
Thanks for making this mate I come from bangor legit just round the corner I've always wondered what It looked like now cheer mate brill vid
The Old Otis Escalators and Travelators Are Awesome
Really enjoying these videos tbh
I used to visit Bangor frequently throughout the 90s, 2000s and believe it or not today (11/07/23). My grandparents and some family still live there. I used to love going into the Flagship there was a great computer games store called Whizz Kids. You could trade in your SNES cartridges. Then we would get groceries from the Co-Op. Then pig out in the food court. Sad to see it has been abandoned. Bangor is not how I remember it at all. Used to be a buzzing town with lots of great shops along the promenade. Sad to see the Windsor hotel is abandoned too. Back to New Zealand for us it is.
11:35 yeah my knees make that noise when I walk up steps too
It looks like The Galleries in Wigan, where there are very few shops left in that place.
Back in the early 2000’s in here used to be packed every weekend when I was a kid then it came to around 2013/14 and it started to die off completely, sad to see, hopefully they make something new in there soon
It seemed to happen over night didn’t it? A Saturday afternoon in the food court and it would be impossible to get a seat. Sitting with groups of your mates with the 99p chicken sandwich’s each so you would be allowed to stay and then just……nothing.
@@Sandmancoast nailed it 😂😂
the wall of the car park side facing high street has an interesting facade with large reflective fake windows that cover concrete bricks, to make the whole thing look like a regular building
Strange that I used to walk there
Man, painful seeing mentionable shopping mall hasn’t aged well left to decaying and it’s shame too as I used to come here in my toddler years up to early adult years…
Cool explore ... sad to see such a big building going to waste. Probably not reusable anymore and only option is demolishing.
It seemed that when they put the food court in upstairs, the centre started to decline rapidly, it was around 2005/2006. Burger King used to be on the ground level and that was when the centre was buzzing. I remember sitting in Burger King when it was downstairs and watching people congregating in and out of the entrance of the Flagship.
I used to go there all the time when I was 7/8, I always wondered what happened to it
Nice pacer
@@Pigeonboy77778u Thanks
Used to shop in that Coop all the time.
I worked maintenance in the center for a year, its demise came at the hands of Michael Herbert (KFC franchise owner), he bought the center so he could build apartments at the rear yard, he ran it into the ground increasing rents and making parking minimum £1, he done this with the intention to sell the center onto Eddie Irvine (former F1 driver) who intends to turn it into a hotel/casino, the multi story carpark is to be a karting track.
It's actually planned to be a arcade from what I've heard
@@Ieatpastaday An Arcade?, will be a pretty elaborate Arcade.., I was one of the last people who worked there.
@@Ieatpastaday As I stated above, the word is its to be a hotel/casino with the carpark being a karting track.
@@formhubfar not really as I've been around asked a phew ppl the car park is now open to cars And ngl Arcades and Casinos are pretty similar but it's likely to be an arcade as then it will attract more people
I queued outside the music shop overnight to buy boyzone tickets. Must have been around 1996. As i remember it there were about 20 teenage girls and one older lad who was sent out to get tickets for his sisters. Im amazed they let us stay inside the centre overnight. Think me and my mates were the last 3 in before they locked the main doors.
It used to be a sea side town with amusement arcades, fish and chip, burgers, and loads of day trippers and teens hanging about the sea front. Then town planners removed the beach, built a marina for rich folk and people stopped coming. They built the flagship centre, god knows why as footfall had fallen off a cliff due to Marina and it was inevitable the centre couldn’t make money as nobody visited Bangor and traders left the flagship after loosing money and it too closed.
Great video, you guys need to check out the big idea building in irvine
Good suggestion but the place is heavily guarded with on-site security guard/van and cameras dotted around the site.
The Kyle Centre in Ayr was recently closed, I wonder if that could be a possible investigation later on....
These places are now out of date.
Great video as always x
Old memories when I always went in their
the coffee and muffins cafe was the least popular part of flagship lol
Yeah, I barely remember it being open
@@adamruth4321 me either, I remember only really seeing people use the seating of it lmao
@@johnpickk7526 the wee morning fry actually wasn’t too bad from it but yeah it was dead most of the day
aye i dont ever remember seeing anyone actually eat anything there
Read in the news today it's just been sold again.
The vacant Flagship Centre site in Bangor, County Down, has been sold in a multi-million-pound deal to developers Brookland Property.
The shopping centre on Main Street closed its doors in February 2019.
Brookland will take possession of the 157,000 sq ft centre and 430-space car park site immediately.
Ricky McLarnon, from Brooklands, said that the prime town centre location "is just crying out for regeneration investment".
"Our first priority will be to get the car park back into use as soon as possible and we will be making an innovative proposal to Ards and North Down Borough Council imminently," Mr McLarnon said.
"As someone who was brought up in Bangor, I remember the Flagship Centre as a vibrant part of the town centre."
another con man who claimed he was penniless not more than a month ago when he failed to repair all the new builds he had sold leaving people out thousands of pounds then he can pay a 6 figure sum for a tip like this.
actually it closed in december 2018!
@@georgebarnes8163 Absolute joker this Ricky --- "The initial ask from Brookland Properties was for £9.1m from the Council to take the Flagship car park on a 50-year lease. This included an offer of a contribution of £1.2m from the developer to provide EV points and improved facilities in other council car parks (it is understood that the centre was purchased by Brookland for £1.8m from the Administrator).
@@John_Wood_ Glad I am not the only one who is on the ball, the whole thing is a farce and the stupid council are even dafter than I knew they were.
@@georgebarnes8163 Often apparent daftness is cover for other more sinister intentions...
This has happened to so many town centres 😢
i saw on internet that the mall is due to reopen this autumn
Explore the abandoned burned down house near applewood, Swords in Dublin. Thr basement looks big but I've never been able to get in out of fear of not being able to get back up
James (Scotty from Star Trek) Doohan’s grandfather had a chemist shop on that site. I think it was where Eason’s had been located.
Some developers should buy this turn it a low income/senior apartment complex. Turn the food court into meals on wheels for the seniors
Who would want to live in the centre of Bangor, the whole town is an abandoned tip of the place, the walks along the shore are the only attraction the town has left. Not a place worth visiting anymore and best avoided.
Love the till roll bunting
Have you seen the Harlequin Centre in Exeter?. It’s shutdown now but I’m not sure if it classifies as “abandoned” but it would be cool to see it.
this place had free parking from it opened, and 2 yrs before it closed they started charging for parking, so people went to other shops like bloomfields. i honestly think people didnt like their changes and revoked. so much for management skills whoever fked that shop up.
I think it would be interesting to see an analysis of how shopping/retails centers effected the retail sector and what the future is given the emergence of online. My own opinion is that shopping centers will eventually be repurposed, or completely demolished, and become accommodation/residential, there is a greater need for housing, than large shopping complexes.
I remember here for years I had been going there since 2003 and my family spent a lot of time here and in 2019 a few of my mates got kicked out but It didn’t matter much to them because of how dead it is
I was in this place about 8 years ago and it looked run down I'm from Belfast and never knew it even closed down
Spooky. Pretty mad to see it like this. It used to be packed out.
How do reduced price tags show the centre was going to close? Shops have sales and reduce items all the time and remain open.
Last I heard there reopening it, Bangor's dead now
The flagship was hopeless when compared to Bloomfield shopping centre a couple of miles up the road, it was never going to survive.
The government's cutting its own throat with these extortionate business rates.
Bangor council could not manage a chimps tea party, the worst performing council in all of Northern Ireland and also has the highest debts which were in excess of 90 million a couple of years ago , also bear in mind that Bangor is a total tip of place full of demolished buildings and boarded up shops, nothing to attract the public bar a few beach walks.
@@georgebarnes8163 Business rates go to central government.
@@marklittler784 they must do, that would account for Bangor Councils massive debts and why the domestic rates have took a fair hike in the last two years, my rates went up by 24 % yet the services were reduced not enhanced.
@@georgebarnes8163 I was amazed when they cut staff by about half ten years ago and still everything was functioning.
@@marklittler784 Yep, a few more staff cuts are needed, too many chiefs and not enough Indians so to speak.