Islander
TS Member
To be fair though, that’s like me taking one step west, and thus being closer to the edge of the known universe, western side relative to my current position on Earth.One step closer to reality.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
To be fair though, that’s like me taking one step west, and thus being closer to the edge of the known universe, western side relative to my current position on Earth.One step closer to reality.
I’d probably even take a step back from that, and believe something may appear if major contract awards were announced, eg for groundworks, infrastructure, rides etc. But solid, going-ahead contracts, not “Ooo maybe we could buy a ride off Intamin”.Anybody can create a glossy report. I did plenty of them for my GCSEs. It doesn't count for anything.
Until there's actual construction and physical infrastructure this still sits in the "pipedream" and "not gonna happen" categories for me.
If nothing else, I’d argue that this is the closest we’ve come to “concrete progress” since at least 2014, even if it’s not actual “concrete” progress in the way that you describe.Sorry, still absolute zero progress.
Just another bit if dreaming, just more detail.
No sign of the real money at all, still.
And we will see "real concrete progress" Matt when we progress to real concrete!
If nothing else, I’d argue that this is the closest we’ve come to “concrete progress” since at least 2014, even if it’s not actual “concrete” progress in the way that you describe.
That must be even just slightly more promising, surely?
With regards to “the money”, I did actually see somewhere where they actually broke down where they were getting their funds from. I think the bulk of it (£2bn) is coming from some investment bank, with KEH providing £500m and Keltbray providing £25m, with a few other sources mentioned too. I’ll see if I can find the article.
And unlike this I can understand why people estimated to Dome would see such high visitor numbers. It was in the centre of London, for a limited time only (come see it while you can) and could be done as a half day attraction, therefore up to twice the number of people. It just goes to show that even with all that in its favour (And the thousands of school kids they brought in daily) it couldn't compete with established attractions.@Matt N, I take it you are too young to remember the millennium dome?
That had aimed to get 12million visitors in that year, when Alton Towers got 8 million. The costs spiralled and they needed a lot more government and lottery money as the number of guests that turned up was about half what they expected (but what is actually a realistic number.
That had aimed to get 12million visitors in that year, when Alton Towers got 8 million[/USER]
I was under the impression that Towers' record attendance was 3 million?
Exactly this.I don't understand why they need to start big. Close to London and an international railway station is a prime location. Perhaps if they aimed a bit lower and waited for coronavirus to pan out first, the project might get somewhere.
When it starts to get traction and visitors, invest more and grow the business sustainably. It would also be easier to get new investors when you show them a proven track record.
