Bold Seagull
strong and stable with me, or...
Many national and international developers have been scared off from Brighton due to a visionless council and a culture of nimbyism.
It takes a huge amount of money and work to get to a planning stage, and unfortunately, we've made it clear we're not an authority that welcomes or encourages quality development.
A progressive council with a vision for their city can attract and encourage investment and quality development through architectural competition, attracting the best planners and architects to produce award winning solutions.
Frank Ghery's first designs for the King Alfred were elegant, and restrained, but it wasn't until the council wouldn't budge on their 25% social housing (despite getting a leisure centre out of it!) and the scheme got diluted, the side buildings became larger, and financially it effectively put the development on a knife edge. Along with the flagrant nimbyism the city showed, we scared off what would have been an internationally recognised iconic building and a first class leisure facility.
The same obstructions have been put in front of the redevelopment of the Marina which again has the potential to be a first class attraction.
We aren't going to get an ice rink, or leisure centre because we've f*cked too many people off.
Look at Worthing, it ran an international architectural competition attracting some top designs and eventually appointed award winning Wilkinson Eyre Architects (yes same architects who got initially knocked back for the Marina development). Their 'Splashpoint' development is now getting awards at the World Architecture Festival, beating off competition from around the world.
In my opinion it's a beautiful building that sits brilliantly off the beach. I can't see something like this being achieved in Brighton which is why we still have the King Alfred.
Our council is run by policy makers and number crunchers. There is no creative vision there, no aspirational agenda. A city built upon the fanciful notion of a royal prince now doesn't know what to do with itself.
It takes a huge amount of money and work to get to a planning stage, and unfortunately, we've made it clear we're not an authority that welcomes or encourages quality development.
A progressive council with a vision for their city can attract and encourage investment and quality development through architectural competition, attracting the best planners and architects to produce award winning solutions.
Frank Ghery's first designs for the King Alfred were elegant, and restrained, but it wasn't until the council wouldn't budge on their 25% social housing (despite getting a leisure centre out of it!) and the scheme got diluted, the side buildings became larger, and financially it effectively put the development on a knife edge. Along with the flagrant nimbyism the city showed, we scared off what would have been an internationally recognised iconic building and a first class leisure facility.
The same obstructions have been put in front of the redevelopment of the Marina which again has the potential to be a first class attraction.
We aren't going to get an ice rink, or leisure centre because we've f*cked too many people off.
Look at Worthing, it ran an international architectural competition attracting some top designs and eventually appointed award winning Wilkinson Eyre Architects (yes same architects who got initially knocked back for the Marina development). Their 'Splashpoint' development is now getting awards at the World Architecture Festival, beating off competition from around the world.
In my opinion it's a beautiful building that sits brilliantly off the beach. I can't see something like this being achieved in Brighton which is why we still have the King Alfred.
Our council is run by policy makers and number crunchers. There is no creative vision there, no aspirational agenda. A city built upon the fanciful notion of a royal prince now doesn't know what to do with itself.