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Shoddy building work on The Moor


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Guest makapaka
Big retailers will design and build their own.

Small to medium sized will buy or rent off the peg.

I say again, if there is a market here for their products they will find a way.

 

No that's not right. There may be instances but usually developers will speculate, normally around an anchor tenant to then encourage others in the area. Particularly in ciry centres. The developers provide the shell and the end user will fit it out to their liking.

 

Instances where a retailer may build their own would be large scale "sheds" in outer city areas but even that is not particularly common.

Edited by makapaka
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I had the misfortune of seeing this monstrosity last week . its awful and I noticed all the lower level windows were filthy . you would have thought that with all the brains at the university ,that someone would have thought to employ a window cleaner

 

In this thread we have someone who is unhappy that modern buildings generally lack the ornamentation of the Victorian era and someone else who is unhappy about a building that is mainly ornament (on the outside at least). I'm quite heartened by this, if everyone agreed on what looks good, our city would probably look very dull.

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I think it looks great. Not been a statement retail building built in years in Sheffield - which is why the town centre can't attract big retailers.

 

Couple more of similar buildings in town would be great.

 

A tad harsh . Primark and cash converters are National companies. :hihi::hihi:

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A tad harsh . Primark and cash converters are National companies. :hihi::hihi:

 

Quite right Penistone.

 

You may mock but snobbery does not draw away from the fact that Primark employs over 57k people and was making a profit at over £313m at last audit.

 

Cash Converters is a worldwide company operating in over 20 countries with over 200 stores in the UK alone.

 

They may not be premium brands but as has been argued dozens of times on this forum, whenever a premium brand opens around here everyone jumps around complaining about them being, poncey, overpriced, snobbish, rip off merchants.

 

We get the businesses that people choose to shop in. They may not be Gucci and Chanel but they are still big businesses.

 

Enough already. People have been bitching and whining for months that "nothing is happening". Now it is people are still bitching and whining.

 

No wonder developers keep away from this place.

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Guest makapaka
Quite right Penistone.

 

You may mock but snobbery does not draw away from the fact that Primark employs over 57k people and was making a profit at over £313m at last audit.

 

Cash Converters is a worldwide company operating in over 20 countries with over 200 stores in the UK alone.

 

They may not be premium brands but as has been argued dozens of times on this forum, whenever a premium brand opens around here everyone jumps around complaining about them being, poncey, overpriced, snobbish, rip off merchants.

 

We get the businesses that people choose to shop in. They may not be Gucci and Chanel but they are still big businesses.

 

Enough already. People have been bitching and whining for months that "nothing is happening". Now it is people are still bitching and whining.

 

No wonder developers keep away from this place.

 

Cash converters aren't a good brand tho. Primark maybe.

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Not really. Developers don't take investment decisions on whether or not there's much bitching and whining going on. They look at the probable return and decide accordingly.

 

You really don't that the public's response to a developer's proposals or other work in an area doesn't have any impact on those "probable return" decisions??

 

A developer comes along with a plan for a nice shiny new shopping mall. They submit proposals and see hundreds of comments from people whining it "looks crap" "not as good as the old days" "nobody will pay that price" "nobody wants that stuff" "its all tat"

 

Do you not think that might sway a decision on whether to go ahead?

 

Scenario 2. A developer starts a project and before phase 1 is even built they see people slagging it off, complaining about the design, complaining about the potential occupiers, complaining about the purposes of it, harking back to the days of old when the moor was filled with traffic and Roberts Brothers and Redgates were still there.

 

Do you not think that might affect a developer's decision on spending money building phase 2?

 

---------- Post added 18-10-2016 at 13:06 ----------

 

Cash converters aren't a good brand tho. Primark maybe.

 

They must be doing something right to have a worldwide operation which has been ongoing since 30+ years.

 

Who are all these absent customers I wonder? Where is all their bad reputation smeared all over the daily papers?

 

Pawnbroking might not be tasteful but just like nail bars, tanning salons, charity shops or even discount stores, it does not make any less of a legitimate business.

 

Its snobbery again.

Edited by ECCOnoob
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Guest makapaka
You really don't that the public's response to a developer's proposals or other work in an area doesn't have any impact on those "probable return" decisions??

 

A developer comes along with a plan for a nice shiny new shopping mall. They submit proposals and see hundreds of comments from people whining it "looks crap" "not as good as the old days" "nobody will pay that price" "nobody wants that stuff" "its all tat"

 

Do you not think that might sway a decision on whether to go ahead?

 

Scenario 2. A developer starts a project and before phase 1 is even built they see people slagging it off, complaining about the design, complaining about the potential occupiers, complaining about the purposes of it, harking back to the days of old when the moor was filled with traffic and Roberts Brothers and Redgates were still there.

 

Do you not think that might affect a developer's decision on spending money building phase 2?

 

---------- Post added 18-10-2016 at 13:06 ----------

 

 

They must be doing something right to have a worldwide operation which has been ongoing since 30+ years.

 

Who are all these absent customers I wonder? Where is all their bad reputation smeared all over the daily papers?

 

Pawnbroking might not be tasteful but just like nail bars, tanning salons, charity shops or even discount stores, it does not make any less of a legitimate business.

 

Its snobbery again.

 

I never said it wasn't a legitimate business.

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A developer comes along with a plan for a nice shiny new shopping mall. They submit proposals and see hundreds of comments from people whining it "looks crap" "not as good as the old days"

 

What if it isn't shiny, and does look crap? No comment allowed, lest we upset the developer?

 

I mean, I like the design of these blocks but I think the OP raises some perfectly reasonable concerns with the finish. Is that not allowed?

 

I can accept modest design for the sake of getting schemes off the ground, but not substandard building quality.

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