by Huntley & Palmer » 01 Mar 2016 19:49
by RoyalBlue » 01 Mar 2016 22:06
Clyde1998 I contacted the council and the club on Saturday night regarding the issue of parking. The club replied yesterday morning (I'm not holding out much hope for a response from the council). In relation to parking the response that I received was:Basically, the club are concerned about the reduction in parking, despite other off-site car parks not being at full capacity at the moment, and the impact that it could have on attendances if a suitable solution isn't found.Reading Football Club In recent seasons, the capacity of the Worton Grange site has been approximately 500 cars and looking at the number of cars using the site, these can in theory be accommodated in other offsite car parks which have been operating at under capacity. However, we clearly would want our average attendance to increase and we fully understand that ensuring the stadium is accessible is key to this. I would like to assure that the club have been actively seeking additional matchday parking from various local businesses and organisations, and we will keep supporters fully informed as and when any further parking become available.
Having less car parking spaces will be an issue next Friday, for the Palace Quarter-Final. The total (off-site) parking capacity is currently just under 2,400, now that Worton Grange will be unavailable. The club's own car park has around 2,000 spaces, although these are almost all parking permits that are sold out for this season and not all of the car park is available for supporters either, as the players, journalists. etc use it. I'm sure that local residents would prefer for people not to be parked on the streets, although this may be a suitable short term solution for some who parked at Worton Grange.
In the initial email, I brought up Green Park as a solution to the parking situation - despite their, current, stance on preventing Reading fans from parking on the site. I've since found out that Green Park has space for over 3,000 cars - so even a small portion of that would be beneficial in helping reducing the problems that the loss of parking spaces at Worton Grange could bring. Additionally, Green Park would gain revenue from it - should they wish to allow fans to park there.
I'm aware of the buses that the club put on for supporters, although this may not be a viable option for people outside of Reading - particularly if the buses don't pass through their town/village. Additionally, trains can be completely overpriced - as to make it unaffordable to some.
by STAR Voice » 02 Mar 2016 09:12
by Forbury Lion » 02 Mar 2016 12:19
Maybe the car park attendants only declared 500 cars to their superiors pocketed the rest or maybe their superiors only declared 500 to the tax man....... it's debatable, much like the attendance figures in the Elm Park days.RoyalBlue I'm really surprised that they reckon the capacity of Worton Grange was only 500 cars. There always seemed more cars than that at busy games
by One8Seven1* » 02 Mar 2016 12:34
by Nameless » 02 Mar 2016 12:52
by RoyalBlue » 02 Mar 2016 13:55
STAR Voice STAR gathered responses from c100 supporters at the time of the public consultation in Oct / Nov and those views are also reflected in this thread.
Our main concern is that a proportion (unknown) of our support will find the lack of alternatives to parking within walking distance of the stadium (following the closure of Worton Grange and the stadium’s own car parks) a reason for not coming / not renewing season tickets and we communicated this concern to the club at the time.
We’re working our way looking through the plans and we will be responding to the consultation, but we don’t spot any easy answer to the issue. Our reckoning on the net loss of ‘non-park and ride’ spaces close to the stadium is between 1000-2000, that is taking into account the new multi-storey (+600) and the losses of Worton Grange and the stadium car parks (it’s hard to say how many stadium spaces are taken by football fans on match days, given staff, park and ride, hotel etc).
There is a transport strategy – we don’t know what proportion of supporters that will work for. We know of individual instances where it won’t work / would be prohibitive in terms of time and money. In theory Green Park station could be very helpful. From the more informed comment we’ve had so far it won’t be any more useful or convenient than Reading West was for Elm Park (for younger readers, not a lot).
Both Brighton and Southampton are cited as examples of where public transport has worked in a new stadium environment. You can argue, as someone does above, that the Madejski Stadium is in a different situation from those – ie it is at a motorway junction that is not well-served by regular public transport and therefore a substantial car parking resource is essential.
It would be helpful if anyone can tell us of any football stadiums that are out of town / by motorways and don’t have much car parking resource nearby, so we can see how they cope. Swansea?
by Armadillo Roadkill » 02 Mar 2016 14:06
by Nameless » 02 Mar 2016 14:25
by Maneki Neko » 02 Mar 2016 14:27
by Nameless » 02 Mar 2016 14:36
Maneki Neko yeah, a bit more park and ride provision, and a few more taking the excellent bus service from the provinces and we'll be fine!
by Maneki Neko » 02 Mar 2016 14:39
NamelessManeki Neko yeah, a bit more park and ride provision, and a few more taking the excellent bus service from the provinces and we'll be fine!
Certainly as a stop gap till the monorail is finished.
by Armadillo Roadkill » 02 Mar 2016 14:41
NamelessManeki Neko yeah, a bit more park and ride provision, and a few more taking the excellent bus service from the provinces and we'll be fine!
Certainly as a stop gap till the monorail is finished.
by STAR Voice » 02 Mar 2016 15:43
Nameless Why focus on non park and ride spaces ? Park and ride seems a reasonable option when there simply isn't land on which people can park and walk. The key will be making the ride bit efficient so the time it takes to get back to your car by bus isn't significantly longer than the time it took to walk to Worton Grange.
by Nameless » 02 Mar 2016 15:52
by Clyde1998 » 02 Mar 2016 16:32
RoyalBlue I'm really surprised that they reckon the capacity of Worton Grange was only 500 cars. There always seemed more cars than that at busy games. I also wonder which car parks were operating under capacity as the Holiday Inn car park always looks pretty full (or are they including Park and Ride when they refer to other offsite car parks operating under capacity?).
by One8Seven1* » 02 Mar 2016 16:41
Nameless What is the situation with the greyhound stadium land ? Who owns it and what is the long term future for it ?
An ideal solution would be for the club to own it and make efficient use of it for parking but I suspect as soon as REP kicks in it will be redeveloped and is far too valuable to just use for parking.
If and when that goes there is a huge problem....
Bolton for a comparison ?
Location is similar, not sure how much parking they have on site.
by STAR Voice » 02 Mar 2016 16:47
Clyde1998RoyalBlue I'm really surprised that they reckon the capacity of Worton Grange was only 500 cars. There always seemed more cars than that at busy games. I also wonder which car parks were operating under capacity as the Holiday Inn car park always looks pretty full (or are they including Park and Ride when they refer to other offsite car parks operating under capacity?).
I was surprised by that, as well. I quoted a figure of 1,000 spaces, as that was the only figure I could find - it was from a article on the Arsenal website about travelling to Reading; the capacity of the other car parks they've listed is the same as what's quoted on the club website. I suppose that the capacity of Worton Grange could be lower than it was in 2012 though...
EDIT: In fact, using web.archive.org, the club website had Worton Grange's capacity at 1,000 in September,
by Nameless » 02 Mar 2016 16:52
by Hoop Blah » 02 Mar 2016 16:53
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