I had been meaning to visit Wrexham ever since I heard that its new shopping centre, which opened 12 months ago, was a very similar development to that proposed for Hereford’s Edgar Street Grid site. Having made the effort to travel to north Wales and study the town’s new Eagles Meadow centre at first hand, it has brought home to me why we should think again about the ESG retail quarter. Read the rest of this entry…
The Campaign Blog
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A tale of two town centres
September 29th, 2009Posted in Articles, News | No Comments »
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Odeon’s relocation could create true Transport Hub
September 29th, 2009LIKE the fleapit in the 1957 Peter Sellars comedy The Smallest Show on Earth’, Hereford’s Odeon struggles on against the odds. It has the dubious distinction of being the smallest of all the mighty cinema chain’s venues and the only one still without air-conditioning. And as any parent who has planned to take the family to a popular blockbuster will know, an un-numbered pre-booked ticket to the Hereford Odeon merely confers the priviledge to queue on the pavement until the doors open!
ESG / Stanhope publicity has airily talked about a multiplex cinema coming to the Grid site, but as with so much else about this £multi-million pipe dream it’s just talk. The IOC campaign believes that the urgent relocation of the Odeon into a new purpose- designed twin- or triple-screened cinema on a site on Lower Widemarsh Street would free up the cinema’s present Commercial Road site for redevelopment into a true Transport Hub.
With a block of new buildings fronting the main road containing restaurants, bars and cafes, the back land could become a proper covered bus station with toilets, information and ticketing desks. This would replace the present muddled and uncoordinated trio of bus assembly points at St Peters Square, Hereford Station and Commercial Road. A high-level weather-protected travelator (like those at Manchester Airport and the NEC) might even provide an umbilical link for travellers changing from train to bus.
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ESG scheme will mean massive job losses
September 29th, 2009WITH one in six British households now without an adult wage earner, the current economic climate is certainly the worst possible time to launch any major project which further threatens employment prospects. But some Hereford employers, with businesses which have so far managed to weather the recession, are predicting that the ESG scheme will put as many as 3,500 local jobs at risk.
Nearly 200 businesses, with a combined turnover of over £140-million, are being threatened with the disruption of relocation if work on the ESG development ever gets underway. Specialist companies affected include Jewsons, National Autogas, Reprodux and RSS Refrigeration. Andrew Sanders of the Edgar Street Association says: “There is an increasing worry that hundreds of jobs and many viable businesses are going to be wiped out to make way for an ill-conceived road and a large car park.”
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Phoney Transport Hub: a bus stand and some bushes
September 29th, 2009BACK in February, members of the public were treated to two sessions of a special Transport Workshop’, organised by ESG to unveil what was billed as the city’s new Transport Hub. Participants quickly realised that what independent transportation specialists and ESG executives understand by the word ‘Hub’ are two very different things. At least one distinguished guest walked out, branding the event a ‘sham’.
Speakers outlined a scheme to concentrate many bus arrivals and departures in front of Hereford Station, to improve car parking and provide safe cycle storage. But the appearance of the station forecourt would be little changed, save for the addition of a weather canopied bus stand directly in front of the station building and some token landscaping and benches. Most surprisingly, there was to be no physical segregation of vehicles and pedestrians. More of a cosmetic makeover, as one disappointed visitor put it.
Clitheroe, Corby, Manchester Piccadilly, Stratford East in London, Walsall: transport interchanges up and down the country which should have been used by ESG’s designers as templates for how all forms of transport can be integrated to provide passengers with convenient and comfortable ways of moving from one mode of travel to another. Sadly, it seems Hereford won’t be joining that list of national exemplars.
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Railway Station improvements could miss Paralympics deadline
September 29th, 2009LAST year Network Rail gave Herefordshire rail travellers a pleasant surprise with its announcement that new disabled access lifts and footbridge was planned for Hereford Station, replacing the antique footbridge which links platforms. The city’s Grade II station—perched at the northernmost part of the ESG site—is unusual in that it is owned by NR but operated by Arriva Trains.
But once again, lack of forward thinking on the part of ESG means that two golden opportunities to capitalise on this valuable asset have been missed. Next year, hundreds of blind and partially-sighted visitors are due to descend on Hereford, as participants or spectators in the World Blind Football Championships. And in 2012, the Royal College for the Blind is due to play host to at least one of the international teams participating in the 2012 Paralympics.
It is still unclear whether the new structure will be completed in time for the athletes’ arrival.
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Yazor diversion: flood ‘savings’ seem questionable
September 29th, 2009HOT on the heels of the July planning meeting which approved the designs for the new Roman Road Livestock Market, came a joint ESG-Council announcement of a major civil engineering scheme to the north-west of the city. This is the diversion of flood waters in the Yazor Brook, which is to be re-routed via a 1.4km-long underground pipe into the River Wye.
Planning approval still has to be given and regional funding for the £3.5-million operation is being sought. The scheme’s promoters are confident that it will virtually eliminate any risk of the Livestock Market’s site flooding, as well as providing protection for the ESG site to the south.
Most surprising is the very precise figure, included in the Press announcement, of £2.76-million which the engineers put on the ‘savings’ from flood damage to houses in the Edgar Street area. This contradicts a figure given by ESG Chief Executive Jonathan Bretherton to the Herefordshire & Worcestershire Chamber of Commerce journal, where he boasts of “a saving of over £5-million in after-flood clear-up costs”.
To amend the famous observation of Benjamin Disraeli: There are lies, damned lies and ESG statistics’.
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City jewel needs a polish
September 29th, 2009THE High Town Butter Market opened in 1857, 17 years before its near-neighbour in Broad Street, the City Library & Museum. Over decades, both have been shamefully ignored in terms of routine maintenance and improvements. It would be no exaggeration to say that, if a film company was making a movie set in the mid-19th century, it would need to make precious few changes to the interiors of either city landmarks in order to create an air of Victorian authenticity.
Over 600 covered retail and specialist markets still exist in Britain today, the majority municipally owned and run. Abergavenney and Cardiff are two local examples which remain vibrant and profitable.
The present system of stalls and aisles in Hereford’s covered market date from 1925 and virtually the only ‘modernisations’ which have taken place since then are the insertion of the ugly barrel-vaulted ceilings (which obscure a very fine iron and glass roof structure) and some automatic doors. In 1966 there were 16 greengrocers trading inside the market hall, today there is just one.
The landlords obviously consider efficient winter heating arrangements, air-conditioning to cope with summer heatwaves and public toilets as unnecessary luxuries. Which makes Herefordshire Council’s claim, when launching its recent ‘consultation exercise’, that the High Town Butter Market is the ‘jewel’ in the city’s crown’ ring somewhat hollow.
While the market’s local customer base remains remarkably loyal, steadfastly ignoring the comfort and convenience of the city’s air-conditioned emporiums, many of the Butter Market’s 35 traders believe that this fragile balance—and their livelihoods—would be shattered if big name attractions were to beckon from the ESG retail quarter. A more prudent use of public funds, some argue, would be to carry out a comprehensive refurbishment of the city’s Butter Market, rather than waste it on a new Livestock Market complex.
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£6M Link Road promises chaos
September 29th, 2009IF the British public sector sponsored a Municipal Bunglers League, Herefordshire Council would surely be undisputed league champions.
Consider the evidence. When every authority in the land is focussed on the Green Agenda, Herefordshire wants to build a £130-million bypass and new road bridge. After the ignominy of having its grant applications for the Rotherwas Relief Road turned down on no less than three occasions by the Department for Transport, the council opted to go it alone—choosing an alternative route to the line recommended by its own highways consultants.
Can it get any dafter? It can.
Based on extensive knowledge of highway engineering, the council’s ESG property company plans to drive an 800m-long Link
Road from the north end of Commercial Road to Edgar Street. But this £6-million super-highway will be just one lane wide in each direction, with the smooth flowing of traffic interrupted by no fewer than four sets of traffic lights and assorted pedestrian- controlled crossings. And since the Link Road has to make a major T-junction when it reaches Edgar Street, this will further exacerbate north-south traffic movement along the A49. Which should really please the Highways Agency!Originally conceived as a ‘relief road’ replacing Newmarket and Blueschool Streets, the Link Road will also be expected to carry the high volume of bus traffic entering and leaving the pick-up points in front of Hereford Station, as well as the large numbers of car-bourne shoppers who use the Morrisons supermarket. Surely a recipe for chaos.
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No hope of new city library in next decade
September 29th, 2009WHILE Birmingham has started work on its new £200-million city library, and Brighton has planned, built and picked up international design awards for its Jubilee Library, Herefordshire Council continues to talk about the need to build a new city library. In its present Broad Street building there are no public toilets, no air- conditioning, poor disabled access and cramped computer suites. But what can you expect from a building that’s 135 years old?
For nearly a decade the council has been talking about giving the county a modern library to be proud of. Like Norwich or Winchester, both of whom set off on the same quest at the same time; both of them now have internationally-acclaimed state-of-the-art libraries in use.
Herefordshire Council’s programme of procrastination began back at the turn of the century. After short-listing four potential sites for a new city library, it ducked its head back into the sand for a couple of years. Then, with the first hints of the Livestock Market project came a new promise: a library would form part of a new Civic Centre. Selected developer Stanhope’s masterplan even spoke of a ‘cultural quarter’, to follow closely after the first-phase Retail Sector, with the promised civic centre now re-branded as the Herefordshire Centre.
Then in early-2009 the council announced that it was about to purchase the freehold of the former Bulmers HQ in Plough Lane, which it had been occupying as tenant for more than two years. Hello Civic Ivory Tower, goodbye City Library. And not a squeak from the all-seeing Scrutiny Committee.
So book-lovers, it’s back to Square One. And given the Department for Culture, Media and Sports’ £100-million funding ‘black hole’, it won’t be this side of 2119 that anyone on the council will need to worry about building a new library in Hereford. Phew!
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New Livestock Market will be costly white elephant
September 29th, 2009MANY local farmers and several Herefordshire councillors are convinced that building the new Livestock Market on Roman Road, for which planning permission was given in July, will prove to be a huge and costly mistake.
Legal experts now confirm that the county’s Royal Charter to hold a weekly market was granted as a right and not a legal obligation. Many Herefordshire councillors argue that if the city-based weekly market was to close, the nearby markets of Ross, Leominster and Brecon would adequately fill the void.
Three years ago, after an extensive trawl of the rural area north-west of the city, Herefordshire Council purchased a 48-acre green field site on Roman Road. The formal purchase of the site took the council’s legal department over a year to complete when it was discovered that with the arable land came a restrictive covenant (placed by the Church Commissioners) against building!
Designs for a new timber-clad building complex were eventually commissioned from a member of the Amey group and a complex flood alleviation scheme, involving the 1.4km diversion of the Yazor Brook, also had to be put in hand, funded by regional government.
So with land purchase, legal complications, design, construction and landscaping costs, the total bill—for a market which will operate only 52 days a year—is likely to be in excess of £10 million. Many are saying this could prove to be an expensive white elephant.
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