- Oct 17, 2008
- 16,396
The state of your big top, mate
"United say the entire project has the potential to create 92,000 new jobs, will involve the construction of 17,000 homes and bring an additional 1.8 million visitors to the area annually. They add the project will be worth an additional £7.3bn per year to the UK economy."Is Ratcliffe still looking for funding from the public purse for this?
The European Super Conference League (3rd tier). Only Manchester United and Plymouth ceded their place in British football. Plymouth on the basis of a successful referendum on Devon's Independence.Which division is that?
To be fair, he makes a compelling argument and there are quite a few impressive elements to take in. But I'm not completely sold on the whole thing, if I'm honest. More like a pipe dream than the actual reality that Offshore Jim is clearly banking on.Good call getting Sir Norm in. I’m impressed on a few levels.
This wouldn’t surprise me.A design inspired to appeal to a potential Saudi takeover.
Well, in the interview with Neville, Sir Jim said the club wouldn't need public money to build the stadium but that they would need it to be the center-piece of the regeneration effort that was already previously announced by the Government. I read that more as the club will benefit from the improved transport links and road infrastructure around the ground without having those costs but that the Government won't actually be paying for the stadium itself. Technicality maybe, and it made me think about the amount of work the Albion had to do on the A27. I seem to recall we had to pay for the redesign of the road and the new bridge and expansion work that was mandatorily required."United say the entire project has the potential to create 92,000 new jobs, will involve the construction of 17,000 homes and bring an additional 1.8 million visitors to the area annually. They add the project will be worth an additional £7.3bn per year to the UK economy."
"He said there was no date in place for when building work on the stadium would begin, adding: "It depends how quickly the Government gets going with the regeneration programme. I think they want to get going quite quickly."
Sounds like it, yes...
Don't know about that - but definately inspired by Brighton's Royal Pavillion!Nice to see B&HCC recouping money by selling them the i360
For someone with so much money, Jim Ratcliffe is a miserable sod.Hilarious that Radcliffe is promoting this at the same time as being interviewed by Gary Neville saying unless they cut staff sandwiches at lunchtime, they'll be broke by November.
As others have said, complete....![]()
I agree, whether Offshore pulls this off is another matter to the actual architectural plans.To be fair, he makes a compelling argument and there are quite a few impressive elements to take in. But I'm not completely sold on the whole thing, if I'm honest. More like a pipe dream than the actual reality that Offshore Jim is clearly banking on.
‘Part of regeneration project’ = ‘access to cheap funding’Well, in the interview with Neville, Sir Jim said the club wouldn't need public money to build the stadium but that they would need it to be the center-piece of the regeneration effort that was already previously announced by the Government. I read that more as the club will benefit from the improved transport links and road infrastructure around the ground without having those costs but that the Government won't actually be paying for the stadium itself. Technicality maybe, and it made me think about the amount of work the Albion had to do on the A27. I seem to recall we had to pay for the redesign of the road and the new bridge and expansion work that was mandatorily required.