Would'nt it have been better for the councillors to have a nose round a building before agreeing to knock it down rather than just look at pictures? Also whoever advised them it had been empty for 15 years should be maybe be asked how they came to that conclusion.
Quote from: rjp on March 07, 2013, 06:10:57 PMBalls! I saw the title of this thread and thought we may have a chance of some decent beer in the official bars next year. That's false advertising in my book.They used to do a cask ale in the Holte Pub, may do still for all I know, but you are only ever going to get racecourse beer in bars that only open occasionally. I would be very grateful for a pump serving Mad Goose, for example, but you could guarantee it would be vinegar.
Balls! I saw the title of this thread and thought we may have a chance of some decent beer in the official bars next year. That's false advertising in my book.
Quote from: myf on March 07, 2013, 10:45:44 PMits being knocked down for junction improvements. id wager the industrial land will lie vacant for years. all for job creation but none is guaranteed here, and the council has track record of over engineering its roads. sad IMOIt won't.it is being done for a specific development
its being knocked down for junction improvements. id wager the industrial land will lie vacant for years. all for job creation but none is guaranteed here, and the council has track record of over engineering its roads. sad IMO
Quote from: Clampy on March 08, 2013, 10:29:31 AMWould'nt it have been better for the councillors to have a nose round a building before agreeing to knock it down rather than just look at pictures? Also whoever advised them it had been empty for 15 years should be maybe be asked how they came to that conclusion.I find it staggering that 1. They didn't know it was a going concern. 2. They didn't go and have a look for themselves.3. That they've more or less admitted to 1 & 2.
Quote from: Jimbo on March 07, 2013, 03:47:13 PMQuote from: pauliewalnuts on March 07, 2013, 03:18:46 PMQuote from: Jimbo on March 07, 2013, 03:01:20 PMQuote from: pauliewalnuts on March 07, 2013, 02:56:14 PMQuote from: Trinitymiddle on March 07, 2013, 02:42:01 PMWe have lost enough of our architectural heritage in this city, especially in the city centre, and it would be nice to not keep knocking this stuff down. Generally what it gets replaced with is of no aesthetic merit at all (look at what is on the site of the old Reservoir pub), and every time we do it, it makes the city a slightly less pleasant place to liveWhat about when what is built in the place creates jobs for the area?Have you seen the amount of space the building takes up? It's not going to affect the commercial viability of the new development much if it stays. Standing as it does, on a fork in the road, it could be a gateway to the development. There's a lot of shit in that area that should be demolished before the King Edward.Do you know that, though? You're passing it on as fact, so you must, I imagine?I have to say, it has never struct me as particularly special. It's not even one of the nicer pubs in Aston, in my opinion.No, Paulie, I haven't been on site with my hard hat and measuring wheel, but then you knew that, didn't you? I'm basing it on the fact that the pub occupies a small piece of land on a corner in a fork in the road. Unless the plan is to build over those roads, it's surely a small part of the overall development. What really surprises me is the amount of people who are happy to see more and more of Birmingham's old buildings get bulldozed. It's as if they no longer live there or something I am not happy to see old buildings get bulldozed if it can be avoided, but then again I am willing to see them go if there is an ecomonic case for it which stacks up.I asked about whether you knew it would not affect the commercial viability not because I thought you would, or because I do - I don't - but to make the point that whilst it's easy to say "this or that wouldn't affect it" we don't actually know if that is true. If you're going to put that as a main reason for your argument, shouldn't you actually know whether that is the case or not?I am also not saying it should get bulldozed, I am just making the point that maybe it is going for a reason.I agree with you on the destroying our history thing, I just disagree that means never demolishing anything, ever. I also think it devalues the argument to protect our heritage when buildings of really questionable value - and I appreciate the pub is at a fork in the road and what not - get talked up to something they're really not.EDIT - apparently, that junction is to be the main entrance to the business park, which is why they want to demolish the pub.
Quote from: pauliewalnuts on March 07, 2013, 03:18:46 PMQuote from: Jimbo on March 07, 2013, 03:01:20 PMQuote from: pauliewalnuts on March 07, 2013, 02:56:14 PMQuote from: Trinitymiddle on March 07, 2013, 02:42:01 PMWe have lost enough of our architectural heritage in this city, especially in the city centre, and it would be nice to not keep knocking this stuff down. Generally what it gets replaced with is of no aesthetic merit at all (look at what is on the site of the old Reservoir pub), and every time we do it, it makes the city a slightly less pleasant place to liveWhat about when what is built in the place creates jobs for the area?Have you seen the amount of space the building takes up? It's not going to affect the commercial viability of the new development much if it stays. Standing as it does, on a fork in the road, it could be a gateway to the development. There's a lot of shit in that area that should be demolished before the King Edward.Do you know that, though? You're passing it on as fact, so you must, I imagine?I have to say, it has never struct me as particularly special. It's not even one of the nicer pubs in Aston, in my opinion.No, Paulie, I haven't been on site with my hard hat and measuring wheel, but then you knew that, didn't you? I'm basing it on the fact that the pub occupies a small piece of land on a corner in a fork in the road. Unless the plan is to build over those roads, it's surely a small part of the overall development. What really surprises me is the amount of people who are happy to see more and more of Birmingham's old buildings get bulldozed. It's as if they no longer live there or something
Quote from: Jimbo on March 07, 2013, 03:01:20 PMQuote from: pauliewalnuts on March 07, 2013, 02:56:14 PMQuote from: Trinitymiddle on March 07, 2013, 02:42:01 PMWe have lost enough of our architectural heritage in this city, especially in the city centre, and it would be nice to not keep knocking this stuff down. Generally what it gets replaced with is of no aesthetic merit at all (look at what is on the site of the old Reservoir pub), and every time we do it, it makes the city a slightly less pleasant place to liveWhat about when what is built in the place creates jobs for the area?Have you seen the amount of space the building takes up? It's not going to affect the commercial viability of the new development much if it stays. Standing as it does, on a fork in the road, it could be a gateway to the development. There's a lot of shit in that area that should be demolished before the King Edward.Do you know that, though? You're passing it on as fact, so you must, I imagine?I have to say, it has never struct me as particularly special. It's not even one of the nicer pubs in Aston, in my opinion.
Quote from: pauliewalnuts on March 07, 2013, 02:56:14 PMQuote from: Trinitymiddle on March 07, 2013, 02:42:01 PMWe have lost enough of our architectural heritage in this city, especially in the city centre, and it would be nice to not keep knocking this stuff down. Generally what it gets replaced with is of no aesthetic merit at all (look at what is on the site of the old Reservoir pub), and every time we do it, it makes the city a slightly less pleasant place to liveWhat about when what is built in the place creates jobs for the area?Have you seen the amount of space the building takes up? It's not going to affect the commercial viability of the new development much if it stays. Standing as it does, on a fork in the road, it could be a gateway to the development. There's a lot of shit in that area that should be demolished before the King Edward.
Quote from: Trinitymiddle on March 07, 2013, 02:42:01 PMWe have lost enough of our architectural heritage in this city, especially in the city centre, and it would be nice to not keep knocking this stuff down. Generally what it gets replaced with is of no aesthetic merit at all (look at what is on the site of the old Reservoir pub), and every time we do it, it makes the city a slightly less pleasant place to liveWhat about when what is built in the place creates jobs for the area?
We have lost enough of our architectural heritage in this city, especially in the city centre, and it would be nice to not keep knocking this stuff down. Generally what it gets replaced with is of no aesthetic merit at all (look at what is on the site of the old Reservoir pub), and every time we do it, it makes the city a slightly less pleasant place to live
I wasn't aware that Aston Hall & the church were scheduled for demolition and Aston Park was being built on.
Quote from: dave.woodhall on March 08, 2013, 11:14:30 AMI wasn't aware that Aston Hall & the church were scheduled for demolition and Aston Park was being built on.Should we really be knocking down interesting buildings just because there is something more interesting round the corner? Aston is full of derelict land, if we can start the industrial revolution surely its not beyond our wit to move a planned road a few hundred metres on a plan.