by WAZZOCK » 14 Nov 2016 17:14
by Nameless » 14 Nov 2016 18:01
by Sutekh » 15 Nov 2016 12:23
Evening Standard
http://www.standard.co.uk/news/uk/readi ... 95701.html
A huge “world-class” convention centre in the Thames Valley is being planned by the owners of Reading football club to lure business from London venues such as ExCeL and Olympia.
They believe that the arrival of Crossrail in 2019 will effectively turn the Berkshire town into “an extension of west London” and allow it to compete for lucrative trade conferences and exhibitions, as well as cultural events such as concerts.
The International would be built on land next to Reading’s Madejski stadium near the M4, which is currently being used as a car park and a training centre. It would have a 6,000-strong capacity, making it bigger than rivals in the south, such as the Brighton Centre and the Bournemouth International Centre.
Praphant Asava-aree, director of RFC Prop Co, a subsidiary of the Thai-owned club, said: “If you are looking for somewhere that will host more than 5,000 people in one room, there is really nothing there at the moment.
“A lot of the big international companies that want to do business in the UK look to locate in this area because it is so easy to get to Heathrow. If you want to get from Heathrow to central London you will be lucky if it takes an hour, and it can take much longer. So we believe Reading will be a very good alternative to London for people holding conference events or exhibitions. If you look at London now, Earls Court has gone, ExCeL is very expensive.”
The convention centre would include an ice rink and would be at the heart of a £200 million development called Royal Elm Park, which would include 600 new homes, a hotel, restaurants and a park.
Nigel Howe, chief executive of Reading football club, said: “Royal Elm Park is a unique opportunity for Reading to deliver a world-class convention centre that will put the town on the map and enable us to compete on a world stage.
“It will also benefit the football club and will be important for Reading’s future growth, attracting national and international investment and offering tangible benefits for local people with new homes, jobs and an improved match-day experience.”
A planning application has been submitted to Reading council, with a decision expected in December or early in the New Year. If it gets the go-ahead, the convention centre is expected to open in 2018.
by bagman » 15 Nov 2016 14:10
by RG30 » 15 Nov 2016 14:40
bagman Brenda's Father in law !
by Jagermesiter1871 » 15 Nov 2016 18:56
bobby1413Sutekh Just want any sort of decent centre so there could some prospect of getting on the gig circuit for touring bands as it is quite pathetic that the Thames Valley/Berkshire has nothing to host decent size concerts on a regular basis
Yea it is quite frustrating when watching TV and some band is on talking about a tour they're doing. Up pops the poster saying where they are going:
Cardiff
Bristol
Bournemouth
Oxford
Nottingham
....
Everytime...
by Jagermesiter1871 » 15 Nov 2016 18:56
bobby1413Sutekh Just want any sort of decent centre so there could some prospect of getting on the gig circuit for touring bands as it is quite pathetic that the Thames Valley/Berkshire has nothing to host decent size concerts on a regular basis
Yea it is quite frustrating when watching TV and some band is on talking about a tour they're doing. Up pops the poster saying where they are going:
Cardiff
Bristol
Bournemouth
Oxford
Nottingham
....
Everytime...
by Greatwesternline » 16 Nov 2016 11:46
by tidus_mi2 » 16 Nov 2016 12:06
by Greatwesternline » 16 Nov 2016 14:40
tidus_mi2 I would argue the exact opposite, no credible source, I would say there is no reason to believe him, from my perspective you have chosen to believe him as it fits you belief that the Thais are just after the land with no interest in the club.
by Sutekh » 16 Nov 2016 15:32
Greatwesternlinetidus_mi2 I would argue the exact opposite, no credible source, I would say there is no reason to believe him, from my perspective you have chosen to believe him as it fits you belief that the Thais are just after the land with no interest in the club.
I don't care about the source. Yes it does fit my belief that the Thai's are interested in the land not the club. They are a property development concern.
The development will take another 5 years or so lets says. Then they would have owned the club for 6-8 years. Why would they want to keep it?
Its not a viable business. They aren't philanthropists.
by Lenny The Tramp » 16 Nov 2016 15:48
by royalp-we » 16 Nov 2016 16:24
Lenny The Tramp Royal Elm Park will be the beginning of the end of Reading FC.
Will result in no car parking and very little room for buses on match day. What we will have, though, will be a non existent train station on a line that is a long way from the stadium. And empty flats owned by overseas landlords.
Millwall fans are mounting a huge campaign to prevent development around their ground. They think it will destroy access to the ground and kill the club. And they have a train station right next to them that has about 10 trains an hour.
Meanwhile Reading fans wonder about how many seats the new conference centre will have and whether some band might be able to play there.
If you were a developer, you'd look at the plans and think: "If only there wasn't that blinking great big stadium in the middle of all this."
by West Stand Man » 16 Nov 2016 17:11
Lenny The Tramp Royal Elm Park will be the beginning of the end of Reading FC.
Will result in no car parking and very little room for buses on match day. What we will have, though, will be a non existent train station on a line that is a long way from the stadium. And empty flats owned by overseas landlords.
Millwall fans are mounting a huge campaign to prevent development around their ground. They think it will destroy access to the ground and kill the club. And they have a train station right next to them that has about 10 trains an hour.
Meanwhile Reading fans wonder about how many seats the new conference centre will have and whether some band might be able to play there.
If you were a developer, you'd look at the plans and think: "If only there wasn't that blinking great big stadium in the middle of all this."
by AthleticoSpizz » 16 Nov 2016 17:33
by Nameless » 16 Nov 2016 18:40
by Greatwesternline » 16 Nov 2016 20:56
Nameless Aren't Millwall fans about 20 years too late ? Moving from the Den killed their club.
For those taking the negative view, please give us your alternatives ! There are very few rich people (philanthropists !) willing to throw money at football clubs. We were lucky that for 20 years we had a close approximation. Once SJM ran out of cash presumably your best suggestion would have been to fold the club....
by WAZZOCK » 16 Nov 2016 22:23
Greatwesternline Even if this person doesn't have a clue. I see no reason to not believe it.
by Greatwesternline » 16 Nov 2016 22:34
WAZZOCKGreatwesternline Even if this person doesn't have a clue. I see no reason to not believe it.
Good logic
by bobby1413 » 16 Nov 2016 22:37
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