Vince, Charlie and Sam wrote:My guess is that they are going to demolish both of these buildings as well as the Scenic Railway in the very near future, since the financial profit in doing this will far outweigh any fine which will be levied.
Unauthorised demolition of a listed building carries with it anything from a fine to a prison sentence.
http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts1990/Uk ... .htm#mdiv9
Your argument that the financial profit in demolishing the structure(s) would far outweigh any fine which may be levied is undermined by the fact that the Council can issue a 'listed building enforcement notice', which requires the owner to rebuild the building to its former state:
http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts1990/Uk ... htm#mdiv38
So the owner pays his fine, or serves a prison sentence, then still has to rebuild the structure. And if he ignores the enforcement notice, he gets another fine, which increases the longer he ignores the notice.
This legislation is in place to stop the very situation you described from happening.
Shipley Glen is a very different situation. In that case, the structure was delisted due to a lack of evidence on its age. We have no such lack of evidence here at Dreamland; there is no doubt that the Scenic Railway was built in 1920 and is the oldest operating roller coaster in the UK. And English Heritage is right behind the listing, as anyone who saw their letter in response to the dreadful Margate Masterplan would know.
Nick