by Nick » 08 Apr 2010, 22:07
Firstly, I can confirm 100% that the Dreamland Margate project is a heritage project. Of course the new Dreamland will provide new features in the form of new environment, new food & beverage, new retail, new heritage interpretation, etc. But the concept is 100% heritage rides, albeit in a contemporary environment.
That is why we were not keen on pursuing rides such as the swinging pirate ship at Barry Island, which some people on this forum expressed an interest in on another thread. Not only would modern rides be too expensive for us to acquire, they would dilute the concept. We want to be the world's first amusement park of historic rides. We also want to be different to every other seaside amusement park in the country. We can't be either of those things if we also have modern rides as there are many parks that feature both and do it very well (Blackpool and Great Yarmouth pleasure beaches, for instance).
That is not to say that we couldn't have guest rides in for a period of time. For example, we could have a guest pirate ship, with interpretation showing how these rides had developed from the steam yachts of 100 years ago. Similarly, we could have guest vintage rides, such as old travelling waltzers, dodgems, gallopers, etc. But these would only be for specific periods to add variety. We are going to be an amusement park of historic rides, not modern rides and not a travelling fairground.
In response to the comments about lack of progress, more is happening now than has been the case for some time. We are right in the middle of detailed negotiations on the land, and our current focus is to raise the rest of the money we need. We have raised £500k from Heritage Lottery and £3.7k from Sea Change. That still leaves us several million pounds short of the £12.4m needed for Phase One. Given the state of the property market, we cannot rely on Section 106 funding. That sort of money is simply not around any more, but undoubtedly will be in the future. Therefore we are still having to spend a lot of time assembling bids, which themselves cost several thousand pounds to put together. We now have a team of four members of staff, led by Jonathan Bryant (who is doing a fantastic job, by the way), working towards these bids. We have the capacity to do it, but we have to work to the timetables handed to us by the grant organisations. I am afraid there is no other way of doing this - unless there is a benefactor out there with £8.4m!
In parallel with this, we now have a project manager appointed who has put together a detailed programme for construction. That has to be approved by the various parties involved in the project. Once approved, we will share it with everybody straight away. The programme shows the park opening at the start of the season in 2012 as has been the case for some time now, and we are still on target to meet that. Nothing has changed or slipped.
We are, however, ploughing ahead on the assumption that we will secure the remainder of our funding. We will be announcing very soon the appointment of architects, landscape architects, M&E consultants, engineers and others who will be converting the concept drawings we produced last year for bid purposes into detailed drawings that will be implemented. Because of the scale of the project and the source of funding, we had to go through a very lengthy OJEU process of appointments, which has taken several months. We have had no choice in this matter. And we are doing all of this without all the funding in place because if we don't, we won't meet our opening target.
We are now trying to produce regular newsletters to update everybody on where we are. The first was uploaded to the campaign news page on 20 March. There will be another to follow soon, which will hopefully be more informative about the actual status of the project.
I can assure everyone on this forum that there is nobody who wants to see this project implemented more than me. And I would like it to be implemented yesterday if at all possible, for obvious reasons. Dreamland is vulnerable and we need to start work as soon as we possibly can. But we do have to secure the rest of our funding (to the tune of about £8m), we have to appoint the professional team through a formal process, we have to then produce the detailed plans, transfer the land and then build it. And as somebody who works in the property development industry in my day job, I can say that we are pushing ahead as quickly, if not quicker, than most other multi-million pound development projects - even in the good times - because of the commitment of the team and the Council.
If anyone has any ideas (or money!) that will enable us to short circuit any of the above, please let me know!
Keep checking back here and the Save Dreamland News page and we will keep you all updated.