webbyson said:ALSO TO MANY TRAINS RUNNING OVER THE PITCH!
Virgo's Haircut said:I can see it now...
Ref: Hold on lads, a Seaford train is just coming out, get your orange vests on
sullyupthewing said:And Sainsburys wanted it they have got more cash than we have.
sullyupthewing said:And Sainsburys wanted it they have got more cash than we have.
beorhthelm said:
Fundementally, city centre locations arnt suitable for a sports stadium. very few have every been built in the centre of towns/cities, they've always been build on the edge of town - although the surrounding areas usually get swallowed up by development...
Gwylan said:I think the 30,000 who went to Cardiff might disagree with that statement.
Lord Bracknell said:The Station site always had to be developed as a whole. It's a huge amount of land and it would have been incredibly expensive to acquire for just a stadium. The City Council would no doubt have been very choosy about any associated activity that shared the site. Hotels? Commercial? Offices? Shops?
Getting the right mix is what held back any successful planning application for forty years. I'm not sure that the Albion would have been the right sort of organisation to resolve the issues.
I think the site was owned by the British Railways Property Board, a curious body that remains in the public sector and inherited all of the non-railway land that used to belong to British Rail.
BRIGHT ON Q said:i thought supermarkets were meant to build out of town now.i cant think people will drive into the centre of brighton for their weekly shop.