![]() ![]() McDonald’s most sustainable restaurant includes: Powered by on-site solar panels and wind turbines, learnings from the new restaurant in Market Drayton, Shropshire, will be used to create a blueprint for McDonald’s freehold new builds across the country from 2022. The Market Drayton McDonald’s, which will act as a blueprint for future restaurants around the country, has been designed to be net zero emissions standard in both construction and every day operation – an industry first.įeaturing the latest innovations in sustainable building design throughout, the restaurant has been deliberately designed to retain the familiar McDonald’s look and feel to ensure it can be effectively replicated as the business looks to revolutionise the way it designs its new and existing restaurants to achieve net zero emissions for all its 1,400 restaurants and offices by 2030.įrom a Drive-Thru lane made from recycled tyres, wall art made from used coffee beans and kerb stones made from plastic bottles, the restaurant will act as a testing site for a number of industry-first innovations. Friday 10 th December 2021 – Today McDonald’s opens the UK’s first Net Zero Carbon restaurant 1. The Visitation of Shropshire, 1623 is available on the Heraldry page.MCDONALD’S OPENS FIRST UK NET ZERO CARBON RESTAURANT Eddowes's Journal, and General Advertiser for Shropshire, and the Principality of Wales.The British Newspaper Archive have fully searchable digitised copies of the following Shropshire newspapers online: .uk (Old Ordnance Survey maps to buy). ![]() Online maps of Market Drayton are available from a number of sites: The Return of Owners of Land in 1873 for Shropshire (Salop) is available to browse. ![]() The following is a list of the administrative units in which this place was either wholly or partly included.Īny dates in this table should be used as a guide only. Transcribed from The Comprehensive Gazetteer of England & Wales, 1894-5 The living is a vicarage in the diocese of Lichfield net value, £200 with residence. The grammar school was founded in 1558 by Sir Rowland Hill, Lord Mayor of London, and, was restored in 1877. There are Roman Catholic, Primitive Methodist, Wesleyan Methodist, Baptist, and Congregational chapels and a cemetery. The parish church is ancient, and was restored in 1884 it has a fine Norman doorway. The town is supplied with water from Burnt Woods, Ashley, Staffordshire. A large business is done in corn, cattle, and horses brewing is carried on and agricultural implements are manufactured. Markets are held on Wednesdays, and a meat market on Saturday. There are a meat market, a cattle market, two banks, a head post office, a constitutional club, and a workhouse. It occupies the site of a Roman station and is mentioned in Domesday book as Draitune. streets and black and white houses with carved fronts. Population of Market Drayton, 2125 and including Little-Drayton, 4303. ![]() from London to Manchester, and upon the Stoke-upon-Trent, Newcastle, and Market Drayton branch of the North Staffordshire railway. It has a station on the main line of the G.W.R. Market Drayton (formerly Drayton-in-Hales) a market-town, the head of a poor-law union and county court district in Drayton-in-Hales parish, Salop, near the river Tern, the Shropshire Union Canal, and the boundary with Staffordshire, 14 miles NW of Newcastle-under-Lyme, 16 N of Wellington, and 180 by railway from London. ![]()
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