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#2701 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2005
Posts: 947
Likes (Received): 26
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I have doubts and major quibbles about Liverpool Waters, Peel, the city planning department and Uncle Joe, sometimes all at the same time but I also know a good thing when I see it.
Through the democratic process we already make all and sundry from the local shopkeeper to mega capitalists jump through the hoops of the planning process to gain the all important planning permission. That's one hell of a democratic lock on what goes on in our society and communities and that's alright as far as Iam concerned. On the other hand some people just don't get (or don't want to get) what capitalism is, never mind a free society/free enterprize. For me Liverpool Waters is about economic activity, what brings it about, who makes it work and who sustains it. The stakes are always high and the crucial, blessed (and wilfully misunderstood) players are the shopkeepers and mega capitalists I mentioned earlier. This city went into a period of painful decline because of a lack of economic activity, capitalist vigour and municipal vandalism. Liverpool Waters is a litmus test whether the destructive trioka of EH, Cabe and Department of Environment is brought to heel. It's well worth remembering that it's already happened once before when the magnificent, well designed, lawful, ethically funded Brunswick skyscraper was snuffed out on the stroke of politicians pen...(restricting views of the cathedral..my arse!) Never again. |
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#2702 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Liverpool
Posts: 117
Likes (Received): 0
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Quote:
If you read the comments section under the article, he actually leaves a message: RowanMoore 6 May 2012 6:29PM Just to put the record straight: - funnily enough I do know Liverpool and have visited the site - the proposed towers are considerably closer to the Three Graces than a mile - the reason Peel aren't quoted is that they declined to comment - anyone who thinks the £5.5 billion development in the images will be built as shown is smoking something strong - the main point is that you can have job creation AND decent architecture as Liverpool One shows RowanMoore 6 May 2012 6:33PM Or, to put it another way, why should Liverpool accept a piece of lazy, derivative junk? |
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#2703 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Liverpool
Posts: 117
Likes (Received): 0
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Quote:
Are you saying regulations are acceptable but that they shouldn't get in the way of development? Or are you saying regulations should not get in the way of developments? You seem to say both. |
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#2704 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2008
Posts: 2,215
Likes (Received): 33
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#2705 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 552
Likes (Received): 0
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I've lost count of the number of times I've heard developers boast about something they want to build bringing thousands of jobs, which in many or maybe most cases have been huge over estimates.
In the case of Liverpool presumably, tourism which is an important industry, itself brings many jobs with it and if WHS was lost would that not potentially lose actual jobs rather than potential unproven claims of jobs tomorrow? The point is made that where is the evidence that there are thousands of office jobs to be had and all that is required to bring them is to build big buildings and they will somehow appear? Likewise is there a shortage of flats in this area and is yet more retail space needed that is just waiting to be fulfilled by this scheme? I don't know for sure of course but I doubt it. Seems crazy to put at risk something unique for a load of off the peg tall buildings that in any event there isn't even funding for. I could be wrong on all counts of course and perhaps those more expert in these things will point my errors out in due course.
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#2706 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Liverpool
Posts: 3,756
Likes (Received): 2
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Stubby
Potentially valid points but have a look at posts 2569 and 2570 to admire the heritage that will be lost. No bugger has set foot in there in decades.NB the Tobacco Warehouse is not owned by Peel and will be unaffected, negatively at least, by any development.
__________________
There is surely nothing worse than washing sieves
With the possible exception of being Garth Crooks |
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#2707 | |
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LIVERPOOL England
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 6,584
Likes (Received): 66
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Quote:
Again, Liverpool Waters is much less than a mile from the Three Graces but what he wrote was that the development would 'loom large behind them' which suggests that the towers were going to be built in Castle Street. This is very misleading and, at best, is sloppy journalism. This is really what I was getting at. He is writing for a very London-centric newspaper and it is highly likely that the majority of his readers will not have been to Liverpool or, at least, will not have any familiarity with either the site or the development proposal. I guess that Peel should have been more forthcoming with a prominent architectural critic but there is enough on the Liverpool Waters website to contradict some of the assertions that Moore is making. Where, for example, does he get the idea that all of these office jobs will 'suddenly' appear? Anyone who knows the development plan knows that it is over a period of thirty years and will respond to the economic cycle. The fact that Peel have already delivered Media City in economically depressed Salford is not mentioned. Again, the development is merely a masterplan. The towers shown do not reflect any architect's proposals but merely the size and massing of the blocks. So Moore is right that the renders don't show what will be built but he doesn't need to do so in such insulting terms - he is a prominent architectural critic, not an internet forummer. Calling the proposal 'lazy, derivative junk' when we haven't seen any design proposal for any building, just serves to polarise the argument. People like myself who are largely positive about the development will have concerns but be inhibited from expressing them because it is just feeding the naysayers. Lets keep the discussion civil - after all, it will or won't go ahead despite anything any of us might say. |
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#2708 |
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BANNED
Join Date: Mar 2012
Posts: 75
Likes (Received): 0
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Sums the whole argument up for me suddenly cambridge educated journalists are really worried about Liverpool pull the other one.
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#2709 | |
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____________
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Bootle / Notting Hill
Posts: 4,217
Likes (Received): 87
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Quote:
jonathan.kang0205 image hosted on flickr
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#2710 | |
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cheeky2xist
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Liverpool
Posts: 157
Likes (Received): 20
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and in response to Rowan Moore's criticisms of the plans the Guardian are taking a more positive spin on the plans....
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#2711 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 6,441
Likes (Received): 190
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Well balanced piece, that. Excellent.
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Liverpool Waters. Approved 4th March 2013. |
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#2712 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 1,440
Likes (Received): 19
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Quote:
Let's take the first point. Let's suppose no jobs at all are brought, (an impossibility anyway as jobs will be created by the very nature of the construction ) there will at least be something better on the site than what is there now, all at no cost to the taxpayer. I'm at a loss to see where losing the much hyped up but unproven, (as far as tourist figures are concerned) WHS status could potentially lose jobs? People came here to see the football and the Beatles long before WHS and the only National Museums outside of London and events like the MSF and Sea odysey etc bring in the tourists regardless of WHS. Did we know Dresden had it and llost it or who else actually has it and would it sway you to go. We are Liverpool, WHS or not. (I personally think it's ridiculous to put us on a par with the Pyramids anyway) Regarding whether or not more retails space or office jobs are required or will come or not is irrelevant and not our risk nor our city's. That is totally the risk taken by Peel as was it was the risk of Grosvenor regarding L1. In a lot of cases it is build it and they will come. One thing is for sure, if we don't then they certainly can't. Another thing, how come Peel can be portrayed as a cold, buisness, hearltess property developer, wily enough to trap our hapless city into believing in them - yet, on the other hand they cannot be given enough credit for having worked out the figures, I mean, they must be stupid to build all this property without even thinking they might fill it??? How hapless of them. What is it exactly we are putting 'at risk'. A windswept oller surrounding long disused docks and the Victoria clock tower, all of which will be brought back into use and not hidden behind padlocked gates? Perhaps we should also consider the local residents of Vauxhall who might at last be seeing some light at the end of the tunnel for a swathe of unused land that could bring prosperity and life back into the area. One thing is correct for the detractors who love to say these grand plans will never be realised. They're right, because people like the preservation trust, CABE and Unesco will see to it with all the modifications that keep having to be made to the plans and that's not Peel's fault.
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www.inacityliving.blogspot.co.uk |
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#2713 |
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BANNED
Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Liverpool
Posts: 74
Likes (Received): 0
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I support LW but never again should such a large swathe of land be handed over to one company.
The lack of a competitive vision is telling. Also, if people are concerned about jobs, I believe part of the north docks should have been turned over for heavy industry and manufacturing. Particularly for green energy. It is disgracfull that most of the green tech used in this country is manufactured in Denmark and Holland. |
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#2714 | |
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BANNED
Join Date: Apr 2011
Posts: 108
Likes (Received): 0
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Quote:
Merseyrail rapid-transit is essential to ensure the success of Liverpool Waters and Wirral Waters. They require direct Underground rail access to: Liverpool city centre, to each complex and to Liverpool John Lennon airport. There are no firm proposals to run rapid-transit rail into the two complexes, not even Metrolink type of tram-trains running on Merseyrail lines. The essential catalyst in the success of London's Docklands was the building of the Docklands Light Railway metro.Without the metro the scheme would not have succeeded. The transport priority in Liverpool and Merseyside is rapid-transit connections between:
The region and city has a rapid-transit rail network that is underground in Liverpool and Birkenhead. It is the busiest outside of London. What we see is only 40% of what it can be, as the city is littered with disused tunnels (3-4 miles of them) and reserved trackbed. Most cities are envious of such a setup, clearly Manchester. The obvious thing to do is extend Merseyrail. In true Liverpool style....Not a bit if it. The government were giving out money for tram schemes around the UK and so Liverpool jumped on the money bandwagon and designed a 100% stand alone street running tram system which never integrated with the Merseyrail rapid-transit network. Unbelievable!!!! Manchester wanted an underground, the Picc-Vic, but it was too expensive, so turned to tram-trains, Metrolink. These used existing rail lines and stations and went on the streets across the city centre on segregated lines. They even have Metrolink platforms at Victoria station so it is easy to hop from a train to the tram. Anyone with vision would have adopted this idea and merged the trams with Meseyrail and ran tram-trains on the same tracks branching off when needed to the likes of Liverpool Waters to fill in gaps where the rails do not reach. Does the council concentrate new developments around Merseyrail stations, the transport arteries, as other cities with rapid-transit do? No! Not a bit of it. Transport arteries and developments obviously must go hand in hand. The mayor is a supporter of the tram system and wants it back on the agenda after the DfT rightfully cancelled it. He must be looking at votes rather than what is right for the city. Short termism. As Merseytram was to be built for the wrong reasons it would end up an expensive failure. A massive White Elephant. It is not fit for purpose. It does not integrate with the existing transport network. The city hasn't much of a clue. No Direction, despite an organisation called Liverpool Vision. This give us any low paid job at any cost attitude has ruined a once great city. Nothing built in the past 60 years is any good, except some of the recent distinctive buildings around Canning Dock and maybe the Catholic cathedral. St.John's precinct is an eyesore and a disaster as are: the court buildings in Castle St, the Churchill flyover, the Arena on an in-filled historic Kings Dock, the cheap anytown buildings in the south docks, etc, etc. None of it has done anything to push the city forwards. But a few short term, low paid jobs were created. Wow! The city has the opportunity to catapult itself forwards if done properly. Second rate, cheap, tat design at Liverpool Waters, and Wirral Waters, will not do that. But a few short term jobs may be created. Wow! We can have well paid jobs and quality design, the two are not mutually exclusive. Rowan Moore's Observer article does home in on relevant points. Few experienced people have been in favour of this 3rd rate scheme. It is getting the balance right between heritage and modernity. Peel are primarily a LAND company. They stand to make a fortune from this by increased land values, their aim. Why do you think they want to fill in dock waters on every project they put forward? Water attracts yet bizzarely they do not propose to excavate any infilled waterways to make the projects attractive to buyers. Right now they are part filling in Wellington Dock which is in a World Heritage Site buffer zone. They want lucrative LAND! This proposal stunk of 1980s London Docklands which was pure, cheap, quayside tat. Liverpool has seen enough tat in the south end docks and elsewhere. These docks are a World Heritage Site. Peel and the Council know that. They know what it is all about and they know the rules. Yet Peel choose to ignore the rules then cry foul when people say no. They shout emotive words in a depression like "jobs" to get their way. Little, to none, of the proposal takes into account the heritage of the site. Liverpool is in danger of losing the World Heritage Site Status. This status made the world look twice at Liverpool realising the city was unique and not a working class slum hell hole as the southern based media portrayed. It was key in getting the European City of Culture in 2008, over the gripes of Oxford. It was key in promoting tourism in the city, which is now a major destination. Modern day property developers are not like those of the 1700s before Income Tax when land was taxed. The lack of tax on profits from land attracts the worst kind of land speculators. The Three Graces were not a major success. The desolate windswept environment they created around them, as opposed to neat protected dock that was there with its small boats, has been a problem for the city for 100 years with countless Pier Head makeovers. But they look good from Birkenhead and on post cards. Last edited by Merseyrail; May 9th, 2012 at 08:26 PM. |
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#2715 |
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BANNED
Join Date: Apr 2011
Posts: 108
Likes (Received): 0
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Merseyside is full of land available for heavy industry in manufacturing areas. Speke, Netherton, etc. Keep docks for what they were intended for? Ships and things that float.
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#2716 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 452
Likes (Received): 7
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![]() ![]() Absolutely, I reckon Nelson Dock could be in-filled to provide a terminus for HS2 or a 6-platform public transport interchange, but don't forget the links to new stations at Lodge Lane and elsewhere so the workers can get to their workplaces. Rock 'n troll. |
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#2717 |
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BANNED
Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Liverpool
Posts: 74
Likes (Received): 0
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Some valid points on extending Merseyrail and i'm sure eventually a business case will be there to extend to LW.
I think a LW/North - South strand running tram system would be better suited but I see no reason why a rail station could not be placed at LW too. On the other hand.... "The Three Graces were not a major success. The desolate windswept environment they created around them, as opposed to neat protected dock that was there with its small boats, has been a problem for the city for 100 years with countless Pier Head makeovers. But they look good from Birkenhead and on post cards". Ridiculous. |
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#2718 |
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BANNED
Join Date: Apr 2011
Posts: 108
Likes (Received): 0
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#2719 | ||
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BANNED
Join Date: Apr 2011
Posts: 108
Likes (Received): 0
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#2720 |
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Portsmouths Finest, Maybe
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Portsmouth
Posts: 14,080
Likes (Received): 240
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Someone said Liverpool had the only National Museums outside of London... you do realise Liverpool only has one of many National Maritimes? Not too mention the National Football over in Bradford.
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