< Manchester
South Manchester covers the south of Manchester as far south as the M60. It lies within The Historic County Boundaries of Lancashire. It contains amongst others, the following neighbourhoods:
- Didsbury Historically, this was the home of many of the wealth merchants who traded in the city and is an area with strong Jewish links. It was further developed as railways grew with much more housing built in the 1930s. It is one of the most up-market and expensive residential districts within Manchester. here you will find a mixed academic cosmopolitan community with a smattering of media stars. It offers a wide selection of bars, cafes and restaurants and looks and feels more like an English village than a suburban district 4 miles south of the city centre. Didsbury is often a destination of choice for many people, from elsewhere in the city and beyond, for a meal or drink, in one of the many such bars and restaurants, some of which spill out onto the streets in the summer months.
- Hulme is at the heart of Manchester's counterculture, the area had suffered badly from inept town planning throughout the 1970s until early 1990s. Regeneration of old housing has improved the appearance of the district. It is one of the birthplaces of the European dance scene and home to a multicultural population of artists, punks, anarchists, environmental activists and party people.
- Moss Side Just to the west of Rusholme, is home to a large African and West Indian community a lively and yet tough area is worth a visit for its Caribbean cuisine and pubs.
- Whalley Range Referred to as "Leafy Whalley Range" is one of Manchester's first and finest suburbs started in the early 1830s, built by local banker and businessman Samuel Brooks as "a desirable estate for gentlemen and their families". Here you will find grand Victorian houses on beautiful tree-lined roads that border Alexandra Park and Upper Chorlton Road.
- Chorlton-cum-Hardy Known as Chorlton, this is a suburb of Manchester with good facilities and a residential area of choice for the city's arts, theatre, and music people. It offers a wide range of continental-style café bars and eateries and some trendy shopping around Beech Road. The continental-style café bars and eateries and some trendy shopping outlets have also taken over large stretches of the main shopping streets, Wilbraham Road and Barlow Moor Road.
- Withington Is a diverse district housing a mixture of "professionals" and "students" and close to the University of Manchester and the Manchester Metropolitan University.
- Rusholme A multicultural community, home to the largest concentration of South Asian restaurants in Manchester known as the "Curry Mile" (along Wilmslow Road). Here you find cuisine from India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, North Africa and the Middle East.
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