One thing I’ve noticed while a lot of clubs have moved to new grounds, how much the away fans like and appreciate Villa Park and the atmosphere of a traditional club It happens more and more as the football ground landscape becomes very similarThere is always very favourable comments by the away visitors, proper ground, proper club all that sort of stuffI reckon it would be away fans favourite groundAnd there’s us saying we should knock it down. It’s an absolute jokeThere be an outcry from Villa fans if that ever happened and not only Villa fans It would be like knocking down Hever Castle because it isn’t roomy enough and the toilets need attentionI’ve been to most of the new grounds They are all nice, but there’s something missingLet’s not become the local counsellors of the 60’s and 70’s knocking down precious buildings and building shit that won’t last in its place Take the Villa away from Villa Park and you take the heart out of the club
Quote from: john e on July 06, 2023, 10:46:20 AMOne thing I’ve noticed while a lot of clubs have moved to new grounds, how much the away fans like and appreciate Villa Park and the atmosphere of a traditional club It happens more and more as the football ground landscape becomes very similarThere is always very favourable comments by the away visitors, proper ground, proper club all that sort of stuffI reckon it would be away fans favourite groundAnd there’s us saying we should knock it down. It’s an absolute jokeThere be an outcry from Villa fans if that ever happened and not only Villa fans It would be like knocking down Hever Castle because it isn’t roomy enough and the toilets need attentionI’ve been to most of the new grounds They are all nice, but there’s something missingLet’s not become the local counsellors of the 60’s and 70’s knocking down precious buildings and building shit that won’t last in its place Take the Villa away from Villa Park and you take the heart out of the clubAgree John, It's bad enough that we demolished the old Trinity stand in it's entirety to make way for the current one. It isn't exactly terrible but with a bit of architectural ingenuity we could have retained a lot of the old one to keep more of the essence of what Villa Park is to us and the footballing world. Football is an important part of our culture to the country and ironically as we approach our 150th year of existence we have actual Villa fans talking about moving or demolishing just to satisfy our need for increased capacity. I don't get it. Yes, we need some increased capacity and improvements none of which are insurmountable. Resolve issues and work towards that should be everyone's aim. We are a unique football club in that we have a unique ground in a unique location not that far from the center of Birmingham. It's the envy of others and should be cherished by us all.
It seems to me that the big stumbling block to increasing the capacity past 52k is the Doug Ellis. The question for right now imo is do we need a larger capacity? If in say ten years or so we are selling out at 52k then fair enough, but again it's begs the question what could be done to improve or increase the capacity of that stand considering the way it is hemmed in by the road, and the local residents right to light.
Quote from: Brend'Watkins on July 06, 2023, 12:04:12 PMQuote from: john e on July 06, 2023, 10:46:20 AMOne thing I’ve noticed while a lot of clubs have moved to new grounds, how much the away fans like and appreciate Villa Park and the atmosphere of a traditional club It happens more and more as the football ground landscape becomes very similarThere is always very favourable comments by the away visitors, proper ground, proper club all that sort of stuffI reckon it would be away fans favourite groundAnd there’s us saying we should knock it down. It’s an absolute jokeThere be an outcry from Villa fans if that ever happened and not only Villa fans It would be like knocking down Hever Castle because it isn’t roomy enough and the toilets need attentionI’ve been to most of the new grounds They are all nice, but there’s something missingLet’s not become the local counsellors of the 60’s and 70’s knocking down precious buildings and building shit that won’t last in its place Take the Villa away from Villa Park and you take the heart out of the clubAgree John, It's bad enough that we demolished the old Trinity stand in it's entirety to make way for the current one. It isn't exactly terrible but with a bit of architectural ingenuity we could have retained a lot of the old one to keep more of the essence of what Villa Park is to us and the footballing world. Football is an important part of our culture to the country and ironically as we approach our 150th year of existence we have actual Villa fans talking about moving or demolishing just to satisfy our need for increased capacity. I don't get it. Yes, we need some increased capacity and improvements none of which are insurmountable. Resolve issues and work towards that should be everyone's aim. We are a unique football club in that we have a unique ground in a unique location not that far from the center of Birmingham. It's the envy of others and should be cherished by us all. Spot on, it would be utter madness to leave Villa Park.
Quote from: Rico on July 06, 2023, 12:16:27 PMIt seems to me that the big stumbling block to increasing the capacity past 52k is the Doug Ellis. The question for right now imo is do we need a larger capacity? If in say ten years or so we are selling out at 52k then fair enough, but again it's begs the question what could be done to improve or increase the capacity of that stand considering the way it is hemmed in by the road, and the local residents right to light.Have you been reading the thread? Or anything else about the ground since last night?
Quote from: Rico on July 06, 2023, 12:16:27 PMIt seems to me that the big stumbling block to increasing the capacity past 52k is the Doug Ellis. The question for right now imo is do we need a larger capacity? If in say ten years or so we are selling out at 52k then fair enough, but again it's begs the question what could be done to improve or increase the capacity of that stand considering the way it is hemmed in by the road, and the local residents right to light.That stand has never really been fit for purpose. There was no architect and the then stadium manager went to Jewson and built it. the lower tier had to be completely rebuilt due to asbestos and the upper tier has the most narrow concourses imaginable. It was always likely to be rebuilt at some point because of the quality.
Quote from: jon collett on July 06, 2023, 12:39:35 PMQuote from: Rico on July 06, 2023, 12:16:27 PMIt seems to me that the big stumbling block to increasing the capacity past 52k is the Doug Ellis. The question for right now imo is do we need a larger capacity? If in say ten years or so we are selling out at 52k then fair enough, but again it's begs the question what could be done to improve or increase the capacity of that stand considering the way it is hemmed in by the road, and the local residents right to light.That stand has never really been fit for purpose. There was no architect and the then stadium manager went to Jewson and built it. the lower tier had to be completely rebuilt due to asbestos and the upper tier has the most narrow concourses imaginable. It was always likely to be rebuilt at some point because of the quality.Fully agreed
Quote from: cdward on July 06, 2023, 10:15:56 AMQuote from: Percy McCarthy on July 06, 2023, 09:36:11 AMQuote from: Chris Smith on July 06, 2023, 09:17:06 AMQuote from: London Villan on July 06, 2023, 08:21:18 AMId imagine there will outdoor benches and marquees, to give it the full urban streetfood feel. Be interesting to see how value engineered the new stand is too. Sorry to be a bit thick but I’m not familiar with term value engineered, any chance of a translation that my old brain will understand.Starts off with all bells and whistles, costs cut as it goes along.New buildings usually start off as a grand palace with lots of innovation and cutting edge ideas, and end up as a square box. Form follows function.Ironic that the original Trinity broke all of those rules with Rinder’s “money no object” approach to the architecture.
Quote from: Percy McCarthy on July 06, 2023, 09:36:11 AMQuote from: Chris Smith on July 06, 2023, 09:17:06 AMQuote from: London Villan on July 06, 2023, 08:21:18 AMId imagine there will outdoor benches and marquees, to give it the full urban streetfood feel. Be interesting to see how value engineered the new stand is too. Sorry to be a bit thick but I’m not familiar with term value engineered, any chance of a translation that my old brain will understand.Starts off with all bells and whistles, costs cut as it goes along.New buildings usually start off as a grand palace with lots of innovation and cutting edge ideas, and end up as a square box. Form follows function.
Quote from: Chris Smith on July 06, 2023, 09:17:06 AMQuote from: London Villan on July 06, 2023, 08:21:18 AMId imagine there will outdoor benches and marquees, to give it the full urban streetfood feel. Be interesting to see how value engineered the new stand is too. Sorry to be a bit thick but I’m not familiar with term value engineered, any chance of a translation that my old brain will understand.Starts off with all bells and whistles, costs cut as it goes along.
Quote from: London Villan on July 06, 2023, 08:21:18 AMId imagine there will outdoor benches and marquees, to give it the full urban streetfood feel. Be interesting to see how value engineered the new stand is too. Sorry to be a bit thick but I’m not familiar with term value engineered, any chance of a translation that my old brain will understand.
Id imagine there will outdoor benches and marquees, to give it the full urban streetfood feel. Be interesting to see how value engineered the new stand is too.
Quote from: Chico Hamilton III on July 06, 2023, 10:22:42 AMQuote from: cdward on July 06, 2023, 10:15:56 AMQuote from: Percy McCarthy on July 06, 2023, 09:36:11 AMQuote from: Chris Smith on July 06, 2023, 09:17:06 AMQuote from: London Villan on July 06, 2023, 08:21:18 AMId imagine there will outdoor benches and marquees, to give it the full urban streetfood feel. Be interesting to see how value engineered the new stand is too. Sorry to be a bit thick but I’m not familiar with term value engineered, any chance of a translation that my old brain will understand.Starts off with all bells and whistles, costs cut as it goes along.New buildings usually start off as a grand palace with lots of innovation and cutting edge ideas, and end up as a square box. Form follows function.Ironic that the original Trinity broke all of those rules with Rinder’s “money no object” approach to the architecture. However, it almost bankrupted the club and cost Rinder his job.
The Villa Live (on the cheap) isn't a bad option and taps into a very popular trend of the post-industrial type venue that are springing up everywhere. The question is why have we chosen the cheaper, less adaptable option.