Tower Park

Leisure and retail park, located at Mannings Heath, Poole, Dorset, England


title: "Tower Park" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["buildings-and-structures-in-poole", "tourist-attractions-in-poole"] description: "Leisure and retail park, located at Mannings Heath, Poole, Dorset, England" topic_path: "general/buildings-and-structures-in-poole" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tower_Park" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Leisure and retail park, located at Mannings Heath, Poole, Dorset, England ::

::callout[type=note] the leisure park in Poole, England ::

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/0f/Tower_Park,_Poole,_Dorset,UK(1).jpg" caption="The front of Tower Park, Poole"] ::

Tower Park is a leisure and retail park, located at Mannings Heath, in Poole, Dorset, England. It was one of the first complexes of its kind in Europe when it opened in 1989.

History

The leisure park, which opened in 1989, was a development initiated by local Dorset businessman Bill Riddle, who operated a landfill site in the area. The site chosen for the park was at Mannings Heath, on 53 acres of heathland just outside Poole. Riddle funded the project by selling some land at Mannings Heath to Tesco and much of the park was leased to Allied Leisure PLC.

Tower Park was initially very successful as the quality of its attractions and free parking proved popular. The original attractions included a 10-screen UCI cinema, Megabowl (a 30-lane bowling alley), Ice Trax skating rink, Splashdown Waterpark and an 1,850-capacity nightclub called The Venue, which became one of the leading ‘superclubs’ in the country.

However, within three years of opening, the park went into Administration as a consequence of the early 1990s recession. Although the complex as a whole was rescued by its sale to Tower Park Properties, neither the Ice Trax skating rink nor The Venue nightclub proved to be commercially viable in the longer term. Ice Trax closed in the mid-1990s and The Venue in 1999. The latter did briefly re-open in 2002, but the re-launch did not last.

A Tesco supermarket store was also built at Tower Park. In 2002 it was discovered that a petrol leak from the store’s filling station had been polluting local groundwater for six months. The company was fined by the Environment Agency, although Tesco claimed it had been treated unfairly.

In 2003, Tower Park was sold to X-Leisure, a company headed by PY Gerbeau, which added it to its Xscape brand. The following year X-Leisure invested £5m in refurbishing and expanding the facilities in the park, including adding additional restaurant units. These included Pizza Hut, Nando’s and KFC.

The cinema was sold to Empire Cinemas in 2004 along with five other UCI theatres in other parts of the UK. Empire added an additional six screens and 500 seats in 2011, making the cinema one of the biggest multiplexes in the south of the country. In 2016, it was sold to Cineworld together with four other Empire cinemas. was re-branded as Buzz Bingo in 2018. In 2014, a chemical spill at the Splashdown Waterpark resulted in hundreds of people being evacuated from the attraction.

In 2013, X-Leisure was taken over by the UK’s largest property development and investment Group, Landsec. Tower Park continues to be listed by Landsec as one of its leisure properties on its website.

In late 2024, Tower Park will undergo a multi-million-pound refurbishment.

Attractions and amenities

The buildings at Tower Park occupy an area of 199,000 sq. ft., according to its ultimate owner Landsec. There is also a ground level free car park with disabled spaces.

The attractions include a Cineworld 16-screen multiplex cinema, a Splashdown Waterpark with 13 outdoor and indoor flume rides, Buzz Bingo, Lemur Landings children’s softplay, Hollywood Bowl bowling alley, and a PureGym health club. In addition, food outlets and restaurants include, according to Tower Park’s website, Burger King, KFC, Nando’s, Pizza Hut, Taco Bell and Pizza Express. A Tesco superstore is also located at Tower Park.

References

References

  1. Watts, Peter. (2003). "The Level Guide to the South West".
  2. Slade, Darren. (17 February 2016). "Memories of a £3m 'superclub': when Tower Park's The Venue was place to be". [[Bournemouth Daily Echo]].
  3. (2 August 2003). "Agency's rebuke unfair says Tesco". [[The Grocer]].
  4. (12 January 2004). "Tower Park set to be updated". Dorset Echo.
  5. (13 January 2005). "Tower Park development is Rok solid". Dorset Echo.
  6. (27 January 2005). "Burger King to return to Park after arson attack". Dorset Echo.
  7. (12 August 2016). "Poole's Empire becomes a Cineworld today". [[Bournemouth Daily Echo]].
  8. (2 April 2011). "Poole cinema to become one of south's biggest multiplexes". Dorset Echo.
  9. (18 March 2018). "When Ice Trax was at Tower Park in Poole". Bournemouth Echo.
  10. (15 October 2018). "Gala Leisure completes £40m rebrand to Buzz Bingo targeting new audiences". SBC News.
  11. (29 March 2014). "Poole Splashdown water park evacuated in chemical spill". BBC News.
  12. Monaghan, Angela. (19 September 2013). "Property company Land Securities takes 95% control of X-Leisure". The Guardian.
  13. "Properties". [[Landsec]].
  14. (2024-09-18). "Tower Park to get £2.5m refurbishment this winter".
  15. "Tower Park". Colman Architects.
  16. Slade, Darren. (25 March 2021). "Cineworld makes £2.2bn loss". Bournemouth Echo.
  17. Taylor, Michael. (20 July 2019). "8 amazing water parks you can drive to in a day from Somerset". [[Somerset Live]].
  18. (25 April 2019). "New bus route between Bournemouth and Tower Park". BH Living.
  19. Durkin, Jim. (9 January 2017). "Tower Park soft play closed for a week from today - for £250k refurbishment". Bournemouth Echo.
  20. Reader, Jane. (17 June 2020). "Bowling venues at Branksome and Tower Park set to reopen". Bournemouth Echo.
  21. "PureGym Poole". [[PureGym]].
  22. "What's Here?". Tower Park Entertainment.
  23. (15 August 2014). "Tesco store helping RNLI stay afloat". Bournemouth Echo.

::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::

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