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EAS wrote:A heritage park can attract heritage and other lottery cash. Win hearts and minds. It's all rather more subtle I would suggest than it first appears. It's great PR too.
Let's be brutally honest - we can want all we like, the planning system is on the side of a site owner and without reasonable grounds for objection there is little people can do. Human Rights Act and all that.
Sure we want the whole site as a first option.
Plan B has very reasonable grounds to support it - it's about protecting the setting of a listed structure and providing an enhanced setting... it's a material consideration in planning terms. And will win the support of heritage organisations. There's the re-use of a listed cinema involved too. It's all a good one.
Get real people. These are nasty developers, in general that means mean and bad and greedy. They don't care what we want. They aren't interested in Margate. They have legal teams and things. It's war. It's David and Goliath.
But David did win, remember.
Nick wrote:In answer to the various questions, our Concept Plan for the heritage park covers approximately 7 acres. That is an an area of land provided to us by the Margate Renewal Partnership (a public regeneration organisation), but has no status other than that. It can change, get bigger or smaller (although we would stringly advise against the latter if we are to create an attraction of genuinely national/international appeal).
Of course we should continue to fight for the entire site to be retained as an amusement park. There is every reason for us to do that because we were backed by an independent inspector and the Local Plan still requires that as the starting point.
The heritage park concept is different. This is an opportunity to create a really unique attraction, that would put Margate on the map. It has the potential to be much higher profile than a 'standard' amusement park because of its very uniqueness. It would also be an appropriate setting for the Scenic. However, it is also 'time sensitive'.
The reason for promoting the heritage park now is that several amusement parks around Britain have either closed or are closing, including Pleasureland (Southport), Ocean Beach (Rhyl), Barry Island Pleasure Park and The Village Experience (Fleggburgh) - all for the own reasons, but most to do with property values. Within the next 12 months, the only major seaside parks with any heritage left (except Dreamland) will be the Pleasure Beaches at Blackpool and Great Yarmouth. There is now a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to save some of these great vintage rides and move them to Dreamland, which would be a wonderful setting for them. If you look at the Concept Plan, you can see the sort of rides we are talking about.
But - and this is really the main reason for doing this now - if we leave this idea for another year, then there will be no prospect of a heritage park.
My personal view, having done extensive (and, unfortunately for various reasons, confidential) feasibility work, is that this is a concept that we should pursue as a 'Plan B' because it would create a genuinely first class attraction for the town. I know that the others who have worked on this concept - including Sarah, Susan, Dave and Jean-Marc - are equally as excited by this.
So, yes, we should go on fighting for the full Dreamland. But I believe that we also need to explore this concept further because it would give Margate something that nowhere else in Britain has got. And, let's face it, if there is going to be a heritage amusement park in this country, then it should be at Margate.
In answer to some other questions:
- Our model is for the site to be transferred to a trust. This could be the Dreamland Trust, which was set up by the Save Dreamland Campaign. The trust could have access to developer funding via a 'Section 106 agreement' on the partial redevelopment of the site (something that would not be available if the entire park remains an amusement park) and potentially to grant funding. This could cover some or all of the capital costs of building the park. The park would then be run as any other seaside park is run, i.e. free entry with wristbands or ride tickets, maximising footfall and spend within on-park catering and retail. The park could either be run by the trust (which could include use of volunteers) or managed by a commercial operator. We have interest from established operators in managing a heritage park, on the basis that it is owned by a trust. There are several companies out there that operate living museums or heritage attractions.
- I don't see why the park should be less exciting than a modern theme park, but it would be different. The park would be likely to include exciting roller coasters, water rides, ghost train/dark rides, thrilling fairground rides, but in a really unique atmosphere. It would also appeal to families as opposed to teenagers, and that would be good for Margate. It would also attract those with an interest in amusement park history. The museum inside the cinema would also attract those with no interest in going on rides.
- We are in discussions with several parks about taking vintage rides. We are confident that there are good rides available that we could use that would represent important eras in this country's amusement park history. But these rides will not be available in a few months time.
It is also interesting that our proposals are not a million miles way from Waterbridge's Duke of York proposals. There would need to be some fundamental changes to the Waterbridge proposals to make them acceptable (and I will be writing to them shortly to explain what those changes are), but it is possible that agreement could be reached.
On balance, I think we should pursue this option. If we don't pursue it now, then we cannot pursue it at a later date.
I would be interested in the views of visitors to this forum. I will set up a poll.
Nick


EAS wrote:Oh Bob - wondered where you are!
Of course as ever you are talking out of your rear end about grants and things. Of course there are a variety of pots of funding to be tapped - but I doubt you have ever been involved with anything like that have you?
And nothing is decided as yet about what is to be tried for.
And with regard the comments to me - again, so much waffle and you don't know what you are talking about so really it's not worth doing more than having a chuckle at the idea of all that 'loose' money.
We still wait so many answers to so many questions too in previous posts! Assertions without any backup facts and figures are meaningless.

EAS wrote:I am obviously rather more clued up then about the sources and details of funding than you are, the Olympics isn't removing all sources of funding (not all funding is lottery based) and the benefits are fairly obvious - including heritage, culture, a museum, education, tourism...
Match funding can also include voluntary help.
Bob, why assume simply because people are interested in Dreamland and the Scenic Railway they have no wider contacts, expertise and experience which can be brought into play?

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