kcb wrote: » Now this shower The National Conservation and Heritage Group are trying to scupper it all. Will they ever p*ss off.
Outkast_IRE wrote: » Wouldnt such a large capacity event play havoc with the traffic to that side of the city, they are all small roads around it at present. There must be better locations for such developments surely.
EPM wrote: » I always thought the front was protected alright.
calnand wrote: » ............. I heard a story they were trying to buy the carpark across the road, and build a new multistorey carpark, but they wouldn't sell the site. in whole I think its a great investment in the culture and future of Cork.
WalnutWhip wrote: » .......... While perhaps it’s not the most inspired idea, I so think some type of independent brew house would be great here with basic, BUT DECENT, food being served too. BBQ in the summer in the front court. Maybe throw up a few placards with old photos to remind you of the history you’re sitting on. Either that or a bakery or something, just to keep the industrial element of the site alive...........
WalnutWhip wrote: » To Rhys Essien: No. I don’t think it is needed. We have an Opera House that has had to close for however many months of the year because people weren’t going to it..
Rhys Essien wrote: » Come the summer,see how many gigs will be going on at Live at the Marquee.We cannot keep this going on in a big tent year after year.
gbee wrote: » Live at the marquee has become an institute just as much as some of the Opera House shows around Christmas into the new year have become and do attract full houses for the six weeks of the runs and that is the end of it. One cannot extend them onto a year long venture it just won't sell. Put the Live at the Marguee into a permanent concrete venue and it's its death-knell, apart from one or two shows that will just take from the Point In Dublin anyway and not add new audiences. The promoters have come to this realisation, the tent is attractive, it's got it's annual life just right, it's there in the summer, it's a festival all to itself and then it's gone. You just won't fill a 5,000 seater stadium in Cork with enough events on a weekly or monthly basis, especially as punters discover the trouble it is to get to this site. Why is the point so successful in Dublin?
WalnutWhip wrote: » So basically, we’re making a whopping investment ...............