EAS wrote:Well, I haven't time to argue, but the Turner was well under way long ago, when Dreamland was still open. It's part of someone's dream, and I think both can work together. I don't have a problem with the idea, just the architecture (which may be better in the reality).
No, I agree with most of what you've said there.
As per my original comments, I was aware Margate had slipped into decline... I just wasn't aware of just how grim it really is, until I popped down the other Saturday and had a proper look at it close up.
This shocked me to the extent that I felt the need to dig a little deeper in the hope of finding out just why it is a town like Margate has ended up in such a sorry state, and the more I've dug, the more I've found contradictions and flawed thinking from those in a position to know / do better, some of which I've posted up the conflicting links to in here for all to see.
So I hope you can appreciate that the abrasive tone of the posts I've made to date with regards to the long running saga of the Turner Centre in relation to the plight of Dreamland and indeed Margate itself aren't designed to create new divisions or widen existing ones.
They're merely here to, (in the face of what would at best appear to be a history of 'smoke and mirrors' and blinkeredness on the part of certain official factions), provoke thought in anyone who happens to be passing by and has an interest in Margate and just why it's in the sorry state it currently finds itself in, why said apparent blinkeredness in certain quarters is perhaps questionable at face value, and why it's about time certain factions started to fully embrace the idea of a rejuvenated Dreamland rather than openly dismissing it out of hand, as would appear to be the case given the recently reported flawed outburst of Councillor Ezekiel.
And yes, all power to those who could make a difference in said official bodies who are obviously striving to do so, at least the ones who understand Margate has a past worth preserving, enhancing and investing in, and that rejuvenation doesn't necessarily mean the place has to ignore said past and completely reinvent itself...
With regards to your comments on compulsory purchase orders etc, I bow to your obvious wider experience in this field.
The link I referred to which set me off on that particular tangent is this one: http://www.go-se.gov.uk/gose/planning/planningCasework/cpo/
"Advantages of CPOs
CPOs can help bring about urban regeneration, the revitalisation of communities and the promotion of business - leading to improvements in quality of life. Examples of this include where:
* a local authority wishes to carry out a comprehensive redevelopment of an area where there are a number of separate landowners
* or where a property has fallen into disrepair and it seems unlikely that the owner intends to refurbish it"
Point two would appear to be a valid one given the park has stood empty and in a state of disrepair for some time now... with the site of the arcade owned by the same person along the seafront having now stood empty for the bulk of the nigh on six years since it burned down... which doesn't bode well for the Dreamland site really, does it.
The site goes on to then say the following:
"Local authorities are therefore encouraged to consider using their compulsory purchase powers wherever appropriate to ensure real gains are brought to residents, and the business community, without delay."
I don't think you need to be a fan of amusement parks to appreciate that Margate was a better place when it had a reasonably well invested in amusement park at its heart?
Your point regarding finances... yet again I refer you back to the Turner Centre scenario.
As I have already pointed out, money has been sourced to finance the centre from unaffiliated bodies such as SEEDA.
Had the council not owned the car park / surrounding land upon which the Turner Centre is being built, do you think that would have stopped that project coming to fruition given the amount of enthusiasm the council has had for it to date?
There is no reason that the council couldn't / wouldn't have purchased the land for that particular project; the land had and still has a market value which the council could have achieved had it decided to sell the land on, ergo the land is still a cost which they have effectively borne.
There is no reason that money to finance the purchase and rejuvenation of the Dreamland site couldn't be sought from sources of the nature of SEEDA as part of any overall scheme proposed for the site.
There is no reason why the land, once secured by the council could not then be leased back to whoever rebuilds Dreamland for the specific purpose of returning it back to its original purpose, as in that of an amusement park, assuming the council needed to balance its books in the longer term, although one would hope the extra revenue generated by visitors to the area drawn in by both the Turner Centre, a rejuvenated Dreamland and in fact a surrounding area brought back up from its knees in part by both projects, would be paying for itself and then some by way of said extra revenue.
Remember... approx two million visitors drawn in to the area in part by Dreamland in times gone by... some of them actually spent money on more than candy floss and donkey rides.
There is therefore, no reason why money to complete the compulsory purchase of Dreamland couldn't be factored into any plans to rejuvenate the site by way of its rightful purpose in life should it prove necessary, and a Dreamland supported by a fully engaged and interested council which just happened to also own the site upon which it sits would be a far more secure one than has been proven to be the case in the last decade.


