- Jul 10, 2003
- 27,793
the Palace Pier
There seems to be quite a bit of history of things in Europe burning down when planning permission isn't granted to build something else on the site. Doubt that applies in this case so possibly an insurance job?
Expanded for you.
A ploy throughout southern European nations is for landowners to illegally destroy precious ecology by fire, for their blocked development plans. Greek authorities have highlighted this this summer.
From 2002We need a west pier photo thread. We must all have some. Great for editing
It took a fair bit of effort to set it on fire, so it's difficult to imagine it wasn't done by someone who had a motive. But who had a motive?
Global warming?Deserted structures with no access and with no working services, standing in the sea, don’t usually catch alight by themselves.
Eek. Libel alert.The Ignoble Organisation. ****s
Didn’t a pigeon or seagull fly over and dropped a lit cigarette on it. Swear that was one of the daft theories at the time
I was there and saw it all. A yacht with a tall mast sailed to the east side of the west pier while the Arrows were displaying. As they came in from the west, the wingtip of one aircraft clipped the mast. The aircraft went into a roll over the Palace Pier and crashed inverted into the sea. The pilot had ejected and received a huge round of applause when he was brought ashore. I believe he was Squadron Leader Johnson.I thought the re arrow clipped a mast on the east side of the palace pier and went down there.
The pier itself was such a waste- great memories of living over the road from it in the winter of 62/63 when is was covered with ice. Sat on the beach with the missus in 2003 watching the rest of it burn. So sad.
I'm not sure what size pier you could build, but with that much money you could create a bloody good fireThe latest accounts for The West Pier Trust shows a fund balance of £1,783,918.
I know you can't build a full-scale replacement/replica for that amount, but they seem determined to restore and rebuild the main kiosk which has been in storage since its removal in 1996. It would be great to see part of the fabric of Brighton restitched into the seafront somewhere.
I'm assuming that by 'Southern European' you are also including Sackville Road and a whole series of addresses along Kingsway