B.W.
New member
- Jul 5, 2003
- 13,666
all a matter of trust U/S
IMHO the whole lot will be sold sooner rather than later
You really believe that!!?? Negative twaddle from you as usual.
all a matter of trust U/S
IMHO the whole lot will be sold sooner rather than later
You can't beat a good accountancy gag...An accountant was walking along the road and he sees a man sitting on the pavement. So he walks up to him and says 'dear chap. Why are you here?' To wit the man replies, 'i'm homeless, broke and my wife as left me'. The accountant pondered for a while then reverting to type said 'that's all well and good, but how does it compare to last year?'
Not so. The club will fund it, build it, own it and let it to a hotel company - the club will then get rental revenue.
They are at present going through a viability study to see that the numbers stack up. If those figures look acceptable, then they will put in the planning application.
Non-football related income can NOT be included in FFP calculations
It is one of the listed 'loopholes' that the League will be looking out for
If only the FL would concentrate on ensuring:
(a) those who transgress are suitably punished
(b) those that comply are suitably rewarded
(c) sticking to what was agreed, rather than what the EPL wants
The whole FFP thing appears to be one big ****-up.
Much better if they just binned the whole idea of FFP
It's hardly central, but it is closer to Derby centre that the Amex is to Brighton centre. Also, at least 7,000 work at Sussex & Brighton Universities, so there are comparisons to be made, and there is currently no hotel close by.
Good job it is football related then isn't it!
Run by a football club, built by a football club and placed next to a football stadium, how can it not be football related!?
It really depends which sort of hotel they build. You can put a Travelodge type hotel anywhere within 5 miles of a built up area in the UK and fill it all week with builders and sales types. Weekend it is stag parties and the like. If it is a 4 star hotel then people paying more dollar will not want to be stuck out at Falmer.
It really depends which sort of hotel they build. You can put a Travelodge type hotel anywhere within 5 miles of a built up area in the UK and fill it all week with builders and sales types. Weekend it is stag parties and the like. If it is a 4 star hotel then people paying more dollar will not want to be stuck out at Falmer.
The aim is to attract conference guests, so that The Amex can be used for two or more day conferences, as well as away fans wanting to spend a weekend in Brighton when their team is in town.
Presumably the research has been done to suggest it will have a high occupancy rate. At a guess, the two universities will provide plenty of business, be they parents visiting offspring, would-be-students on research trips, visiting staff and so on. As will other local employers like Southern Water. Plus business will come from the Albion's own conferences.
I think I've said it elsewhere on this thread (can't be arsed to run back through it and check)- about five years ago they stuck a Premier Inn in the middle of the industrial estate in Burgess Hill. I couldn't work out why they'd bothered, but they told me it runs at over 90% occupancy, which shows how much business they get from the corporate sector. Because you sure as hell wouldn't pick Burgess Hill for a holiday.
Presumably the research has been done to suggest it will have a high occupancy rate. At a guess, the two universities will provide plenty of business, be they parents visiting offspring, would-be-students on research trips, visiting staff and so on. As will other local employers like Southern Water. Plus business will come from the Albion's own conferences.
So does money from beer and pies not count either then? Because that is catering not football.
I agree. I've used a few Travelodges in odd remote places in the past and they're always rammed.
But El Pres has said it will be used for conference types and away football fans?
Edna's absolutely spot on. Working for "the worlds largest hotel group", I can tell you that a hotel is an excellent investment. But I would say that, right?
Hotel investors, owners and franchisees often make a full return on their investment, with a good brand name on the front of the property, within 5-10 years. Try finding an equivalent business 'investment' that performs that well in the current climate. Premier Inn and Holiday Inn Express have even delivered full returns in significantly less time, due to their economies of scale and lowest new-build costs. 4 star and above may take a little longer, admittedly, but given the dearth of hotel accommodation in that area and a huge source of possible business in the immediate vicinity (as Edna has already accurately referenced), this proposal makes a whole lot of sense.
You'd be amazed at how much unsupported demand there still is in big cities. Brighton being a prime example. Why do you think brands like the aforementioned Premier Inn and Holiday Inn continued to grow apace, even during the worst economic crisis in living memory.
Thank god we have a clearly wise and ambitious chairman at the helm. Better than a Sainsbury's, no?