Quote from: PeterWithesShin on August 06, 2012, 01:17:08 PMFrom a personal point of view i'd be against the markets leaving the city center. Once or twice a month when i'm town on a Saturday i'll pop down to them for a mooch and a few bits and pieces as they are so close and easy to get to. If they were moved outside the center I doubt i'd bother. Obviously my few quid here and there makes no difference but I wonder how many are and would be like me? Which markets are you referring to, though?This is the wholesale market. Not the market down by the bull ring at the moment.
From a personal point of view i'd be against the markets leaving the city center. Once or twice a month when i'm town on a Saturday i'll pop down to them for a mooch and a few bits and pieces as they are so close and easy to get to. If they were moved outside the center I doubt i'd bother. Obviously my few quid here and there makes no difference but I wonder how many are and would be like me?
The council doesn't have the cash to build new museums. Look what happened with the Science Museum moving to the Thinktank, what was a free facility now costs £39 for a family of four.
Quote from: Chris Smith on August 06, 2012, 02:06:29 PMThe council doesn't have the cash to build new museums. Look what happened with the Science Museum moving to the Thinktank, what was a free facility now costs £39 for a family of four.An excellent example. It now costs more money to see fewer exhibits, and yet we had a perfectly good science museum in the first place. And you're right, the council doesn't have the cash to build new museums, so let's use an existing building to house some of the fine exhibits that are currently stashed away at a warehouse in Nechells.
Who gains from all this demolishing and 'regeneration' but contractors and councillors?
I'm always amused when well-meaning amateurs think their ideas are better than those of people whose job it is to come up with such things. Turning the wholesale market into a tourist destination, for example. It's hardly La Boqueria; the clue's in the name. If you want to walk round there at 4am watching crates of lettuce being fork-lifted into artics go ahead, but you'll be on your own.
It isn't beyond the realm of possibility to build a food culture around markets and wholesale markets, with stalls and small cafes, restaurants, etc. These things may require a bit of imagination and vision, but... nah, let's have a Travelodge and some shops and offices instead.
Perhaps we should be welcoming the ideas of 'well-meaning amateurs', because far too many of the people whose job it has been to build and rebuild this city have got it so badly wrong? I'm sure I don't need to remind you of all the examples, but: the demolition of the Victorian library/Mason College, the disastrous ring road and the 1960s bullring. etc. This market trader - one of your well-meaning amateurs - had an idea for regenerating the wholesale market area, and while he's no town planner, parts of his plan aren't as far-fetched as they may sound.http://www.birminghammail.net/news/top-stories/2011/11/30/life-long-trader-s-vision-of-birmingham-wholesale-markets-revealed-97319-29866054/ It isn't beyond the realm of possibility to build a food culture around markets and wholesale markets, with stalls and small cafes, restaurants, etc. These things may require a bit of imagination and vision, but... nah, let's have a Travelodge and some shops and offices instead.
Re: the above post - again, where are they going to relocate the market to?
You make the wholesale markets sound like some great undiscovered architectural gem that we're at risk of losing...
Quote from: pauliewalnuts on August 06, 2012, 03:40:25 PMYou make the wholesale markets sound like some great undiscovered architectural gem that we're at risk of losing...Come now, Paulie, you're making stuff up again. I'm talking about the importance of having the wholesale market in a central location. It works. It's good for the retail markets and local restaurants. Move it half a mile across the city, to a new purpose-built site? That's fine. But that's not what they're planning to do, is it?