marky wrote:I believe the polo tower now server as a mobile phone mast so can't be taken down.
DawZi wrote:when people refer to eye sores in Morecambe i think the main problem is there's way way way way to many empty shops scattered about all over the place from the days of old when Morecambe was a once thriving holiday resort it now makes the place look deprived with so many boarded up shops everywhere
Peter wrote:DawZi wrote:when people refer to eye sores in Morecambe i think the main problem is there's way way way way to many empty shops scattered about all over the place from the days of old when Morecambe was a once thriving holiday resort it now makes the place look deprived with so many boarded up shops everywhere
The town that time forgot comes to mind
Posh wrote:Peter wrote:DawZi wrote:when people refer to eye sores in Morecambe i think the main problem is there's way way way way to many empty shops scattered about all over the place from the days of old when Morecambe was a once thriving holiday resort it now makes the place look deprived with so many boarded up shops everywhere
The town that time forgot comes to mind
I had a conversation about six years ago with various councillors and officers on Lancaster City Council. I suggested that Morecambe's biggest problem was the amount of shops and that a cull of them might improve the look of Morecambe. Then they could tackle housing. From their reaction you would have thought I'd suggested the council created a manned space mission to Venus.
In my view all the shops (with the exception of convenience stores and takeaways) along Heysham Road from The Battery to the Cross Cop should go; all shops in the West End outside of an area with boundaries of West Street, Albert Road, the Prom and Claremont Road / Parliament Street should go; all the shops on the island created by Euston Road, Central Drive and Queen Street should go and all the buildings flattened; all the shops on Euston Road and Lancaster Road from the bus station to Christie Park; Queen Street and Pedder Street from the car park to the prom should be pedestrianised; between Queen Street and Rita's Cafe all shops should be focused on tourism or related services - so getting rid of the hideous Print and Copy Shop and the grim furniture shop on the corner of Northumberland Street.
It would take a lot of grants, cheap rental agreements and working with housing associations to convert areas into housing but it would work.
Posh wrote:From their reaction you would have thought I'd suggested the council created a manned space mission to Venus.
Freez wrote:and thinking about the possibilities of it actually happening????
...so this manned mission to Venus.......
one or two men?
Freez wrote:and thinking about the possibilities of it actually happening????
...so this manned mission to Venus.......
one or two men?
Peter wrote:I'm glad I've got a Lancaster, Heysham and Morecambe A-Z down here in PO12 1FR
No argument from me, because that's what's needed.
Posh wrote:Peter wrote:I'm glad I've got a Lancaster, Heysham and Morecambe A-Z down here in PO12 1FR
No argument from me, because that's what's needed.
I should have added that concentrating the retail offer in Morecambe would help those businesses to get far more custom and benefit each others business. Take a look down Princes Crescent and you've got one small row of shops that works perfectly with very few if any empty shops. It would rely heavily on compulsory purchase and then conversion to housing in those areas where shops were removed and modernising on places where retail was being kept. My view is that the council would lose money in some areas but gain significantly in others where commercial property values would rise. The problem is that the council doesn't have the neessary finance to invest or the willingness to try something so radical. The other alternative is to create an easy mechanism for change of use of retail properties into housing or offices.
Posh wrote: Take a look down Princes Crescent and you've got one small row of shops that works perfectly with very few if any empty shops.
Posh wrote: The problem is that the council doesn't have the neessary finance to invest or the willingness to try something so radical.
seasonsinthesun wrote:I seem to remember one of the big arguments against the road was that it would not relieve local congestion between Lancaster and Morecambe, only time will tell.
Keith wrote:... university traffic from Morecambe may even use the link>M6>Galgate route to avoid Skerton/Greyhound Bridges at rush hour times
Peter wrote:marky wrote:I believe the polo tower now server as a mobile phone mast so can't be taken down.
Doesn't surprise me.
Possibly the biggest and ugliest eyesore in the UK
Has that burned-out bistro in Heysham Village Square got a preservation order as well?
Peter wrote:Keith wrote:... university traffic from Morecambe may even use the link>M6>Galgate route to avoid Skerton/Greyhound Bridges at rush hour times
Won't be long before they need a Galgate Bypass
Keith wrote:Peter wrote:Keith wrote:... university traffic from Morecambe may even use the link>M6>Galgate route to avoid Skerton/Greyhound Bridges at rush hour times
Won't be long before they need a Galgate Bypass
I've said for years, including in rants on here that there should be a junction off the M6 straight in to the university. It would take a lot of traffic away from Galgate and with the new Morecambe road would make it massively more convenient for uni traffic from Morecambe. For a relatively small amount of money it would make a huge difference to the city and Galgate. Lots of room and an existing bridge too.
OLDHAMADE wrote:Shame folk in higher places don't share the same vision Keith
OLDHAMADE wrote:and that bottle neck they created coming back into Morecambe by the Ryelands park railway bridge always has me fuming as I try to push out any would be cutter in from the right lane entering the space in the left hand lane i've waited patiently to get into via a queue.
Road rage! I feel like buying a bazooka and blasting these T*ss P*ts who should know better into the lune
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