Quote from: Ger Regan on Today at 11:37:48 AMI'm reading it at the moment and was struck by his suggestion that ultimately a new ground was what was needed, presumably what he's inferred from conversations with nassef etcI was very pro new ground but less so nowadays. Our small wobble to the depths of The *checks notes* Europa League shows how fragile the demand is. A 52-55k stadium with its quirks and history is perfect for the foreseeable. In ten years, we will need to upgrade across the board, in the meantime we can keep our options open on whether that’s a move, redevelopment, or upgrades to the existing.
I'm reading it at the moment and was struck by his suggestion that ultimately a new ground was what was needed, presumably what he's inferred from conversations with nassef etc
Also, at least from what I see on social media, there’s a lot of love for Villa Park from other fans. Its traditional nature has/could become a bit of a USP. And the return on minimal investment will certainly be welcomed by the owners. Looking forward to further development of the area seeded by the Warehouse/North Stand/Witton Station investments.
We absolutely do not need to build a new ground, and city centre is an absolute non-starter. We have the worst public transport of any major city in Western Europe. We won't get better than Aston, next to the motorway and two train stations. Wherever you build it, most people will drive, Birmingham is an overwhelmimgly car-reliant city. It would be Hell on Earth trying to get 60,000 people in and out of the city centre.
Maybe a new Sports Quarter would be the answer.
Our great city has been absolutely shite at public transport since the sixties, and is currently skint. We can't even afford to get bins collected.