The
decline of the British seaside resort is very interesting. If you look
at where has prospered, and where has suffered, invariably, the ones
that have suffered most, are the ones that have tried to guess what
people want, and give it to them, and those that have prospered have
done the opposite, and simply been content to be what they were.
Thanet
is a great example. Take Margate. It changed itsef from a nice little
town into the southern version of Blackpool, built dreamland and had
some good years. What happened when people tired of kiss me quick hats,
and a small stationary fair, in the face of cheap Spanish holidays, with
far better accomadation than Margate had to offer, Alton Towers,
Chessington, Thorpe Park etc? It simply couldn't/wouldn't change, and so
began it's slow decline and death as a seaside resort. A nice beach is
simply not enough!
The
same is true of Ramsgate, Pleasureama, the Hoverport, the Pavillion,
the port, Model village etc etc ALL died because times and what people
want change. No matter how much people may not like it, the opinions,
needs, wants and requirements of the great British public are fickle,
and unless somewhere is able to accomadate change it will die.
Take
Broadstairs, it has never tried to be anything other than a quaint
seaside town. No fairground, no port, no huge amusement centre, just a
nice little quaint seaside town. It's the ONLY place in Thanet that's
thriving!
Margate
now has the Turner, that is bringing people, and people are the life
blood of any town that relies on tourism. Without footfall to capitalise
on, everything else is meaningless. From that base, properity can flow.
Starting 80 artists in an artists qtr is all very laudable, but it
employs at best 100 people, and only a very few talented people can be
self employed artists. Don't get me wrong, that investment has it's
place, but so does the likes of the Turner, hotels, flats, supermarkets,
amusements, restuarants, venues, pubs bars etc etc etc.
To
concentrate on a single particular sector is folly, as is when spending
large amounts of cash trying to make a town attractive, spending it on
something that could and probably will become "out of fashion" some
years down the line, at which point, it will be held on to for far to
long, until it eventually collapses, a great case in point being
Dreamland/Ben Bon brothers.
The
most successful holiday towns have either NEVER changed, or embrace
change. To try to hold onto what once worked, hoping it will again will
only ever be a mistake.
Welcome John. You will see that you are now included, somewhat satirically on the Thanet Life sidebar with the other local blogs of interest. Good luck and watch out for he troll!
ReplyDeleteSince you are obviously for cutting out the bs, nice little town, my latin is very rusty but this is Admiral Howard, after the Spanish Armada. "The men have long been unpaid and need relief." The lack of fresh water caused an outbreak of disease and they went to Margate for help. As they were still waiting for their wages to be paid they were unable to buy fresh food for themselves. Howard wrote bitterly: "It is a most pitiful sight to see, here at Margate, how the men, having no place to receive them into here, die in the streets. I am driven myself, of force, to come a-land, to see them bestowed in some lodging; and the best I can get is barns and outhouses. It would grieve any man's heart to see them that have served so valiantly to die so miserably."
ReplyDeleteLOL thank you Simon,
ReplyDeleteI am used to being attacked for views that don't agree with those who believe that regeneration happens by magic, and that taxes come from the sky, and should be usedc liberally, whilst all taxes are lifted on those making teh suggestion that government must fund everything all the time.
I look forward to any relevant comments that are made to this blog, and being amused at the rest.
Thank you Michael, It seems that Margate has truely embraced, enshrined and recreated it's long lost history in the 21st century :-)
ReplyDelete