| |
|
£10M SKY VAULT
Planners have put a
£10m price tag on the Sky Vault landmark but have yet to
decide where it should be located. The giant mesh tunnel
design won a competition nearly two years ago to find the
East Midlands version of the "Angel of the
North" and the Eagle Centre hosted a consultation
day where members of the public had an opportunity to
express their views. Experts who have worked on the
Millennium Dome and London Eye have met with the Sky
Vault Consortium to discuss the practicalities of
building the project (which should fill everyone with
confidence).
It will be funded by the private sector (like the Dome,
remember?), and business leaders in the East Midlands
believe it is important for the area to have a strong
regional identity. No site has yet been chosen for the
structure although the team are considering building it
over a major road such as the M1. The National Forest
Company says it wants the 70-foot-high metal mesh tunnel
built across a road that runs through its land in North
Leicestershire or South Derbyshire.
Other possible sites in the East Midlands include the A1
near Newark in Nottinghamshire, the Grantham area of
Lincolnshire and the M1 in Northamptonshire at Grange
Park. Sky Vault was designed by Nottingham-based 2hD to
span any major road in the region. The large structure
which consists of a cable net, supported by steel arches,
would be illuminated at night. The structure could be
completed by 2006. What's the betting it will take longer
than planned to construct and will cost double the £10m
quoted with the taxpayer funding it?
The Millennium Dome, costing a staggering
£728million, over £200million more than planned, it was
supposed to be a wonder for the world to admire. The
Government built it by the River Thames in Greenwich,
South East London, to mark the new millennium, convinced
it would be a money-spinning landmark. Decontaminating it
cost £180 million and the vital Jubilee Line Tube
extension was finished - £1.4billion over budget.
Tickets went on sale after an opening night disaster
which left VIPs stranded on a freezing station. Twelve
months after it opened its doors it was gutted and it has
stood empty and useless ever since.
The Millennium Bridge, spanning the Thames at a cost of
£18.2million, was another famous flop. Designed by Lord
Foster, it became known as the Wobbly Bridge because of
vibrations caused by people just walking across it. It
was closed after two days. The bridge eventually
re-opened in 2002 after another £5million was thrown at
it.
|