All that's missing is the 42-storey tower which is not now going to happen.
And the steep sided city-centre football stadium.
How good would that have been? Like a lower league St James Park!
Imagine the match day atmosphere....
All that's missing is the 42-storey tower which is not now going to happen.
This isn't a problem relating to Brighton & Hove - this is a problem relating to 'regeneration'.
I dare say there are towns and cities up and down the country with plenty of people who will say the same. Glasgow, for example, is atrocious in these respects. The city council bends over backwards for any rich bastard who promises to build yet more poncey flats or another retail park, but fails to 'regenerate' community facilities or low-cost and social housing. One particularly bad recent example is Silverburn (which recently won a prize for 'Worst Planning Decision of the Year in Scotland'). Essentially, the main community shopping area for the whole of the south side of Glasgow (an area of serious deprivation) and a school have been pulled down and replaced by a shopping mall containing expensive shops and a Tesco. Silverburn's website is quite clear on who they wish to see coming to the centre - those who live in gentrified Giffnock and Newton Mearns (ie Glasgow's Toryville). Sod the locals (although presumably they can have jobs cleaning the place, or something - that's the 'regeneration' bit). Meanwhile, locals on low income now have to waste money on buses or trains to get to the kinds of shops they used to be able to walk to. The Commonwealth Games project is, perhaps, even worse - prefectly acceptable housing in need of some care and attention is to be pulled down and replaced with an athletes' village which will be sold off to yuppies after the games have finished; and, of course, all of the new sports facilities will be carefully policed and expensive to use (it's all in the business plan - and only the incoming yuppies will be able to afford to use them). This, of course, is all being done with funds reallocated from the budgets which support genuine community sports and leisure facilities.
I think that's a matter of opinion. I'll grant you that it's not an awe-inspiring, jaw-droppingly marvelous development that will win awards for the next 20 years, but it is fulfulling some needs in a manner that is not 100% offensive. It's infinitely better than what used to be there. Again, just my aesthetic opinion, you may have preferred the wasteland, fair enough.
Certainly I didn't want to wait another 40 years for the 100% ideal development to come along.
I use conned as a general expression of how Brighton has the opportunity to use land and resources to make the quality of life better for residents instead it uses them to the advantage of Sainsburys.
And Brighton does not need another hotel.
Sorry, Nibble, but you're utterly wrong there. I did some work for the Tourist & Leisure department at the City Council in 2001 and 2002, and back then, they were screaming out for more hotels. They were saying that Brighton is horribly short of hotel spaces - especially around conference times and peak summer times.
It's why Jury's Inn, the one next to the Library and the one where Sergeant Yorke's Casino was have all been granted permission to go ahead as hotel developments. They wouldn't give permission for something it doesn't need. Even then, it still leaves the city short.
Put it this way, if it was what you were after, YOU try and get a two or three-star hotel for the weekend in Brighton during the summer.
If you are playing a numbers game then yes Brighton probably needs Hotels but the reason they are being built is why I say we dont need them. The reason? So that people come into Brighton and spend money in Pubs and shops which is great for business but again ignores the residents needs. Any money that Brighton generates through tourism sure as hell doesn't get put back into the community.
A little balance and consideration rather than pandering to big business is what we need, not hotels. You are failing to see the bigger picture.
Well yes, maybe. If that's the case it can be knocked down and rebuilt like they did with Churchill Square. The Americans do it all the time. Like I said earlier it's only conservative, reactionary Britain that has a default positon of assuming that every development is 'bad' and puts obstacles in the way.Yes it is better than the wasteland but in ten years time that whole part of the development is going to look rundown and awful. It is the next Tyvelgate.
What about all the people in the communitites that work in the Tourism Industry?
Fucke 'em. I want a swimming pool!
On a serious note though the tourism industry consists of very low paid, exploited workers a vast number of which are immigrants that will be conned into any shitty contract so more of this type of work is not really a good thing.
Well yes, maybe. If that's the case it can be knocked down and rebuilt like they did with Churchill Square. The Americans do it all the time. Like I said earlier it's only conservative, reactionary Britain that has a default positon of assuming that every development is 'bad' and puts obstacles in the way.
But honestly you cannot be saying that there wasn't an opportunity to really do something good and inventive with that space and they blew it. They sold out.
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Like? Don't think a leisure centre would have been very good there as its not very well populated.
But honestly you cannot be saying that there wasn't an opportunity to really do something good and inventive with that space and they blew it. They sold out.
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Like? Don't think a leisure centre would have been very good there as its not very well populated.
What? Are you serious? Next to mainline, stones throw from town,If A Sainsburys can survive there, a leisure centre would. a good bus link going directly there and you are away.
And the steep sided city-centre football stadium.
How good would that have been? Like a lower league St James Park!
Imagine the match day atmosphere....
What? Are you serious? Next to mainline, stones throw from town,If A Sainsburys can survive there, a leisure centre would. a good bus link going directly there and you are away.
You need parking there for all the kids IMO and there is already the Prince Regent pool just down the road. You got any other ideas apart from a leisure centre?
If you are playing a numbers game then yes Brighton probably needs Hotels but the reason they are being built is why I say we dont need them. The reason? So that people come into Brighton and spend money in Pubs and shops which is great for business but again ignores the residents needs. Any money that Brighton generates through tourism sure as hell doesn't get put back into the community.
A little balance and consideration rather than pandering to big business is what we need, not hotels. You are failing to see the bigger picture.