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"I've never been to Hull, but I once met a man from Hull for a social... " Go to Hull before its too late! Well at least he didn't smell of fish I hope. We have Iceland and the Cod War to thank for that! | |||
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"I don't know much about Hull but I think you give good post " Thank you. I really should get out more... | |||
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"I don't know much about Hull but I think you give good post Thank you. I really should get out more..." How very Private Eye | |||
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"In my opinion, Liverpool benefited from the investment which came from its capital of culture status in 2000. Newcastle lost out, but has still benefited from regeneration. It's nice to hark back to some kind of good old days, but that's not a viable reality for most modern cities. Adapt or die. " Yes, jobs and decent infrastructure, not trendy window dressing. I agree. I just hope the best of the old can be retained and not homogenised into 'modern city' as often is the case. There is plenty of 50's architectural brutalism that needs dealing with. As for jobs, Siemens is coming to the docks. Hull is ideally placed for the offshore wind turbine industry. | |||
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"I like Hull, my Dad comes from there. The beauty of being neglected is that a distinct identity develops, and a lot of the original buildings remain (at least those not destroyed in the blitz). The Maritime Museum in the old harbour offices is brilliant, straight from my childhood, and not a bit interactive or trendy. The toilets under Queen Victoria's statue are a miracle of Edwardian sanitary engineering. The best I have ever seen. Now the entire city centre is being dug up in preparation for 2017. I suppose my fear is that Hull will become like every other city that has been 'regenerated'. Call me a sentimental, reactionary southern namby pamby. But I fear for Hull...there is a creeping tide of granite paving, public street sculpture, stainless steel and glass facades, and it is coming to this great city. What are your views? " do they still have the poems on the walls there and the fresh flowers in the loos | |||
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"The images on the news look like sensitive regeneration and not glass and steel gentrification. " There's plenty of that near the marina, used to be a fantastic little fresh fish shop there 'till is was forced to move. | |||
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"I like Hull, my Dad comes from there. The beauty of being neglected is that a distinct identity develops, and a lot of the original buildings remain (at least those not destroyed in the blitz). The Maritime Museum in the old harbour offices is brilliant, straight from my childhood, and not a bit interactive or trendy. The toilets under Queen Victoria's statue are a miracle of Edwardian sanitary engineering. The best I have ever seen. Now the entire city centre is being dug up in preparation for 2017. I suppose my fear is that Hull will become like every other city that has been 'regenerated'. Call me a sentimental, reactionary southern namby pamby. But I fear for Hull...there is a creeping tide of granite paving, public street sculpture, stainless steel and glass facades, and it is coming to this great city. What are your views? " When you are listing the public toilets Edwardian sanitary engineering as one of the city's main attractions then it is quite clearly the time to regenerate the place | |||
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"I like Hull, my Dad comes from there. The beauty of being neglected is that a distinct identity develops, and a lot of the original buildings remain (at least those not destroyed in the blitz). The Maritime Museum in the old harbour offices is brilliant, straight from my childhood, and not a bit interactive or trendy. The toilets undier Queen Victoria's statue are a miracle of Edwardian sanitary engineering. The best I have ever seen. Now the entire city centre is being dug up in preparation for 2017. I suppose my fear is that Hull will become like every other city that has been 'regenerated'. Call me a sentimental, reactionary southern namby pamby. But I fear for Hull...there is a creeping tide of granite paving, public street sculpture, stainless steel and glass facades, and it is coming to this great city. What are your views? do they still have the poems on the walls there and the fresh flowers in the loos" I didnt see any poems or flowers, but there was an office for the attendant, and no 20p charge or turnstiles. Clean tiled floors and walls, stupendous sanitary ware of monumental proportions made in Burnley, and a profusion of polished brass pipes. Sublime. I urge people to visit. | |||
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"The images on the news look like sensitive regeneration and not glass and steel gentrification. " I do hope so. My worry is that the regeneration consultants will be brought in...I so hope I am proved to be worrying needlessly. | |||
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"I like Hull, my Dad comes from there. The beauty of being neglected is that a distinct identity develops, and a lot of the original buildings remain (at least those not destroyed in the blitz). The Maritime Museum in the old harbour offices is brilliant, straight from my childhood, and not a bit interactive or trendy. The toilets under Queen Victoria's statue are a miracle of Edwardian sanitary engineering. The best I have ever seen. Now the entire city centre is being dug up in preparation for 2017. I suppose my fear is that Hull will become like every other city that has been 'regenerated'. Call me a sentimental, reactionary southern namby pamby. But I fear for Hull...there is a creeping tide of granite paving, public street sculpture, stainless steel and glass facades, and it is coming to this great city. What are your views? When you are listing the public toilets Edwardian sanitary engineering as one of the city's main attractions then it is quite clearly the time to regenerate the place " These things loom large for men of a certain age! But point taken. | |||
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"The images on the news look like sensitive regeneration and not glass and steel gentrification. I do hope so. My worry is that the regeneration consultants will be brought in...I so hope I am proved to be worrying needlessly." Have a look at the images. There's still a lot of work to do to be ready for January. I like Victorian public conveniences too. | |||
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"The images on the news look like sensitive regeneration and not glass and steel gentrification. " There seemed to be as many roadworks as London - I empathise!! | |||
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"The images on the news look like sensitive regeneration and not glass and steel gentrification. There seemed to be as many roadworks as London - I empathise!! " The entire centre of Hull was closed to traffic last Sunday. Maybe best to have massive disruption in one hit? | |||
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"The images on the news look like sensitive regeneration and not glass and steel gentrification. There seemed to be as many roadworks as London - I empathise!! The entire centre of Hull was closed to traffic last Sunday. Maybe best to have massive disruption in one hit? " Yes, that seems to be the theory in London too sometimes.... | |||
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"The images on the news look like sensitive regeneration and not glass and steel gentrification. I do hope so. My worry is that the regeneration consultants will be brought in...I so hope I am proved to be worrying needlessly. Have a look at the images. There's still a lot of work to do to be ready for January. I like Victorian public conveniences too. " Talking as as man, I prefer a concealing vitreous urinal to a communal stainless steel trough any day! | |||
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"The images on the news look like sensitive regeneration and not glass and steel gentrification. There seemed to be as many roadworks as London - I empathise!! The entire centre of Hull was closed to traffic last Sunday. Maybe best to have massive disruption in one hit? Yes, that seems to be the theory in London too sometimes.... " One hit lasting years. | |||
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"Will it bring thousands more people into the place in a very short space of time? Be prepared for travel chaos,no school places,longer waiting times for a gp appointment and blocks of flats appearing on every square metre of land. The air quality could drop substantially too. We pay heavily for progress. " That is the nightmare scenario. However, Hull is not in a great location for links to the rest of the UK, so I doubt it will happen. I hope that it will rejuvenate the place, open people's eyes to its proud heritage, create new spaces for cultural revival, and make it a truly great city for its citizens. I suspect a lot of luvvies will be helicoptered in...let's hope for some 'legacy'from all this. | |||
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