Quote from: pauliewalnuts on March 08, 2013, 12:18:36 PMQuote from: danlanza on March 08, 2013, 11:21:54 AMQuote 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.That will be the only area with any character around the ground by the time the Planners have finished.I would not hold your breath because the park will be built on before long. Pretty green areas are Planners favourites's.They've just spent a fortune creating a brand new park in the city centre.Is that not due to an EU directive that states that all city centres have to have a certain percentage of ''Green'' land ?I thought that was the case.
Quote from: danlanza on March 08, 2013, 11:21:54 AMQuote 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.That will be the only area with any character around the ground by the time the Planners have finished.I would not hold your breath because the park will be built on before long. Pretty green areas are Planners favourites's.They've just spent a fortune creating a brand new park in the city centre.
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.That will be the only area with any character around the ground by the time the Planners have finished.I would not hold your breath because the park will be built on before long. Pretty green areas are Planners favourites's.
I wasn't aware that Aston Hall & the church were scheduled for demolition and Aston Park was being built on.
Absolutely agree. You don't have to believe in God to appreciate the beauty of a church. Likewise, you don't have to be an old soak to understand that there's history, cultural heritage and aesthetic value in most old pubs. But it helps.
Quote from: Jimbo on March 08, 2013, 04:22:25 PMAbsolutely agree. You don't have to believe in God to appreciate the beauty of a church. Likewise, you don't have to be an old soak to understand that there's history, cultural heritage and aesthetic value in most old pubs. But it helps... and on a similar note, you don't have to be a bulldozer worshipping hater of our architectural history to foresee a situation in which there might be a compelling case to demolish a pub.There also needs to be someone with the belief they can make a profit and the willingness to run a pub, which is why so many of them in Aston are closed down.
At the risk of the wrath of many on here, if it were the Bartons being torn down would we be as philosophical? I'm not sure we would, and to be honest there's not a fat lot in it.
Quote from: Des Little on March 08, 2013, 11:17:24 PMAt the risk of the wrath of many on here, if it were the Bartons being torn down would we be as philosophical? I'm not sure we would, and to be honest there's not a fat lot in it. The difference between the Edward and the Barton's is the same as between a Mk II Cortina and an E Type.
Good urban design builds on the existing local distinctiveness of an area. In deprived areas with little urban structure, sometimes the small fragments of value that do exist can be missed when there is an unsophisticated desire for wholesale change. Whether or not the Eddies is as impressive as some other pubs in the area, or viable in its current guise, I think its disappointing that a new role can't be found for a local landmark.It looks from the Area Action Plan that the pub is being demolished to make way for junction improvements. The unerring rationality of highways engineering has the habit of destroying everything in its path, rather than serving a wider purpose of creating places with character. I can't help thinking that insufficient consideration might have been given to other scenarios for the junction improvements which would have retained the pub, and the path of least resistance has been taken.
Quote from: FatSam on March 09, 2013, 02:22:47 PMGood urban design builds on the existing local distinctiveness of an area. In deprived areas with little urban structure, sometimes the small fragments of value that do exist can be missed when there is an unsophisticated desire for wholesale change. Whether or not the Eddies is as impressive as some other pubs in the area, or viable in its current guise, I think its disappointing that a new role can't be found for a local landmark.It looks from the Area Action Plan that the pub is being demolished to make way for junction improvements. The unerring rationality of highways engineering has the habit of destroying everything in its path, rather than serving a wider purpose of creating places with character. I can't help thinking that insufficient consideration might have been given to other scenarios for the junction improvements which would have retained the pub, and the path of least resistance has been taken. I think it falls back to the problem of lack of demand for pubs in the locale outside of match days. They're struggling to survive in most areas but the demographics of Aston make it even more of an issue.