Ultimately, Aston Hall is council owned. A council who are bankrupt. I'm sure they'd accept a generous offer.
Quote from: Percy McCarthy on April 16, 2024, 12:38:28 AMQuote from: Somniloquism on April 15, 2024, 10:38:16 PMQuote from: TonyD on April 15, 2024, 10:17:20 PMWhy would someone cough up the best part of a billion pounds? What’s in it for them?They get their money back with interest over the 20-30 years of the investment repayments. But instead of Villa working on a current seasonal turnover of £100 mil, we could be working off £150 mil, the extra £50m is spilt between paying back the loans and interest and investing more in the team. And those are low balling. Tottenham went from £200mil turnover in WHL, to £630mil after they rebuilt. Of course they also had CL in there.Fucking hell. Chicago Lion must eat a lot of pies.He has moved to London now hasn't he? I meant Champs League.
Quote from: Somniloquism on April 15, 2024, 10:38:16 PMQuote from: TonyD on April 15, 2024, 10:17:20 PMWhy would someone cough up the best part of a billion pounds? What’s in it for them?They get their money back with interest over the 20-30 years of the investment repayments. But instead of Villa working on a current seasonal turnover of £100 mil, we could be working off £150 mil, the extra £50m is spilt between paying back the loans and interest and investing more in the team. And those are low balling. Tottenham went from £200mil turnover in WHL, to £630mil after they rebuilt. Of course they also had CL in there.Fucking hell. Chicago Lion must eat a lot of pies.
Quote from: TonyD on April 15, 2024, 10:17:20 PMWhy would someone cough up the best part of a billion pounds? What’s in it for them?They get their money back with interest over the 20-30 years of the investment repayments. But instead of Villa working on a current seasonal turnover of £100 mil, we could be working off £150 mil, the extra £50m is spilt between paying back the loans and interest and investing more in the team. And those are low balling. Tottenham went from £200mil turnover in WHL, to £630mil after they rebuilt. Of course they also had CL in there.
Why would someone cough up the best part of a billion pounds? What’s in it for them?
I agree, you could take a portion of the bank without too much negative impact on the Hall itself. Together with a road closure, this would create a decent amount of space. It may not be considered as ideal by the council / planners, but to make an omelette sometimes you have to break a few eggs and they'd need to decide if the benefits of an upgraded stadium is worth it.
Essentially there are 3 realistic options as far as I can see, which I assume are being assessed with the new board appointees:1 - Comprehensive rebuild of North Stand and Witton Lane, then renovations to rest of ground. This would need the purchase of some or all of the houses on Holte Road and potentially Yew Tree Road.2 - Rebuild stadium adjacent to current site (similar to Spurs) - we might be able to achieve that by purchasing the properties backing onto the current site on Witton Lane, as well as all properties and land between Witton Lane, Station Road, Manor Road and Witton Station, extending stadium footprint down to new academy building.3 - New build stadium elsewhere, presumably closer to the city centre.If it was the centrepiece of a whole regeneration of Aston, then my preference would be the second. It potentially limits the number of residents/businesses affected, joins up the ground and academy sites, and we could in theory integrate Witton Station into the stadium complex, similar to how it works at Wembley.
Quote from: LeeS on April 16, 2024, 12:54:44 PMUltimately, Aston Hall is council owned. A council who are bankrupt. I'm sure they'd accept a generous offer.It's not the purchasing of the land/building thats the problem for grade 1 listed buildings. Planning is tight as fuck as they want to protect the building & its surroundings. Any planning permissions have to ok'd by getting listed building consent from the planning authority & any work has to be ok'd by a conservation officer. Those people have to ok every single change & if there is a deviation from the planning, even ones that are necessary for whatever reason, it's right back to planning authorities for consent again. And they can say no, to the whole thing after you have done a shit ton of work. Don't get me wrong, I am absolutely no expert in this field, but I do know that it is a fucking minefield.
Quote from: pablo_picasso on April 16, 2024, 01:08:24 PMQuote from: LeeS on April 16, 2024, 12:54:44 PMUltimately, Aston Hall is council owned. A council who are bankrupt. I'm sure they'd accept a generous offer.It's not the purchasing of the land/building thats the problem for grade 1 listed buildings. Planning is tight as fuck as they want to protect the building & its surroundings. Any planning permissions have to ok'd by getting listed building consent from the planning authority & any work has to be ok'd by a conservation officer. Those people have to ok every single change & if there is a deviation from the planning, even ones that are necessary for whatever reason, it's right back to planning authorities for consent again. And they can say no, to the whole thing after you have done a shit ton of work. Don't get me wrong, I am absolutely no expert in this field, but I do know that it is a fucking minefield. If you look at the listing below, I reckon you'd get planning for the bit labelled A, but nowhere else and especially not the marked B. Is that bit where the sports pitches are big enough to make that much of a difference? Not sure.
If we move to that park opposite the trinity isn’t it going to be difficult playing uphill in the 2nd half if we lose the toss?
As others have said, I think we are in the process of moving to a new stadium over the next decade. If we've got to knock down & rebuild half of the exisiting stadium & add significant improvements to the other half to bring it up to modern standards, whilst still playing there makes no sense to me. All within the restrictions of the existing footprint. With next season being our 150 year anniversary I don't think anything will be announced until after that. They might also want to wait a season or two until we establish ourselves as a team that regulalrly qualifies for Europe. Geographically we should be & are the biggest draw within at least a 50 mile radius & if the performances warrant it, we'll fill the stadium & attract the corporate money. The only site that looks feasible to me is the gas works area, a mile & half away from Villa Park & the city centre & less than a mile away from the HS2 link. There may be good reasons why this is a non starter & the transport infrastructure may be no better than or worse than what we have. I go to Villa Park by car because it takes me an hour to walk to my car & drive home whereas it takes 2 hours if I get the train. If I had the choice I'd go by train, the current set up makes that impractical.
Yes but Doug just ignored it. And built his Lego set instead.