https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-56170991
Developers want to build a 29-storey apartment block on the controversial city centre site where a music venue and restaurants once stood.
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https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-56170991
Developers want to build a 29-storey apartment block on the controversial city centre site where a music venue and restaurants once stood.
Just what Cardiff needs, more flats
What's the point of a city with nothing in it? Developers are hell bent on ripping any kind of originality out of the city to be replaced by soulless identikit blocks, Cardiff Council won't be happy until Cardiff is one long string of apartment blocks and chain restaurants
The chain restaurants is the fault of the public that choose to prioritise price over quality and ethics/morals. You can't blame the council for that.
As for the identikit blocks, well that's where they do have to step in. Look at St David's 2 and the apartments above them - they're discreet and add to the area.
There's nothing wrong with having high-rise apartments it's how it fits in with it's surroundings and it's multi-use occupancy.
Hadn’t realised Gwdihw was no more, that’s a shame.
Tsk tsk. Deary me! apartments not flats mate! Apartments!!!!!
Worked there in one of those buildings from 1963-1965, J.K. White Motor Factors. Memories of my youth.
Why are developers allowed to rip the heart of city centres and replace them with these soulless and mostly inappropriate buildings? One of Cardiff’s charms was the mix of housing/ retail stock but that is slowly being eroded.
I accept that change is natural as a city expands but just look at the monstrosities that have been put up in recent years.
If the apartments are of good quality and a decent size, and there is consideration for parking then I don't object to that at all.
More height and more density in the centre will mean more venues and restaurants ultimately not less.
There are too many low quality buildings and tiny pokey apartments already - if we insisted on higher quality standards and larger living spaces then it would be a benefit for years to come.
Interesting tht development in that area makes redevelopment of the prison perhaps more likely as well. Cardiff prison is old, overcrowded and occupies what is presumably some of the most valuable land in the City.
A more modern facility, more suitable to encouraging rehabilitation could be built away from the city on cheaper land and the prision site redeveloped, opening up the bck of queen street station - and helping to link town and the bay together more.
I'm sure someone will do it eventually
Reckon that Rapport family who own the land on Guildford Crescent had this in mind for years, which is why they panicked and tried to demolish everything on it as soon as they got a whiff of it being a conservation area etc.....can’t quite work out how a shiny block 29 stories high can incorporate the current facade but you never know. Be lucky if the owners get 1 parking spot each.
Nice idea with the prison, not many places will want that springing up next to them mind wherever they decide to move it?
Incorporating the old facades is not a problem. In King William St in London they did it with a façade half the length of the street, it can look very attractive.
Car parking would be 3 levels down probably, and that is easily achievable now without disturbing adjacent buildings foundations at all. No need for a batter to excavate the ground.
It's not crazy. People wont be able to have a car, and if they do they're going to have to park up in Splott, Adamsdown or Butetown if they want a free space, that's a bit of a stretch and not very likely. How will it cause problems when nobody is allowed to park in that area anyway. It's central, so i'm guessing the people that end up living there will use public transport or will walk to work. Exactly what we need.
I don't think it's supposed to blend, that would defeat the whole purpose of it i would've thought. It's difficult to make the connection between the new and the old on the Altolusso. They look like seperate buildings, although that obviously changes when you enter the building. Isn't that the intention of the design?
Does anyone remember CentrePlan 70. It was a futuristic look at Cardiff city centre, with plans for what the city would look like when it had been re developed.
We have had St David's , St David's 2, The Capitol Centre (which is now basically empty, and was the result of demolishing the Capitol Theatre), the other centre that was on Queen Street which was soon redeveloped again. Two cinemas close in Queen Street, Lots of pubs gone too. And now loads of flats, where the old AA Building is, David Morgan, and those monstrous tower blocks for students. And the loss of the bus station.
I think its called progress, nothing to do with cash of course.
I remember CentrePlan 70. I was working for the Council at the time and I remember the huge publicity. The other big thing at the time was the Hook Road which involved improving Cardiff's road links by driving a major trunk road through the City. Hundreds of properties were acquired for demolition or blighted in advance of this proposal before it was abandoned. That was madness.
https://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/w...drawn-15738028
Yes I do! And they had a very futuristic shop front on Queens Street.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/hamble...7603523100997/
Why are they called "flats" when they usually anything but flat?