White Heather
Elite Pro-Member
Hi wawkrk
Thanks - I appreciate what you said above. Effectively yes - the Council did absolutely nothing with regard to transport infrastructure during their ownership of the airport, and as little as they could get away with regarding the terminal development. They undertook piecemeal extensions which resulted in terminal designed to cope with 1960's passenger numbers having bits stuck on here and there, but never really focussed on the future, even when Jet2 arrived and passenger numbers started to increase rapidly. In fact, all they did was bail out when it became obvious that a lot of money was going to be needed to cope with the predicted increase in passenger numbers.
Having done that, and having attracted a record sale price for a regional airport, they have then held a gun to the head of Bridgepoint and forced them to undertake various traffic schemes in the vicinity of the airport in addition to working up a transport infrastructure plan, all as part of the planning process, and unless the airport complied with the requirement, they would not have been allowed to progress the terminal. As a result, although the outline approval was given a couple of years back, in reality, approval was only given last year when the airport had managed to deal with all the council 'baggage' that came with that consent. It is no wonder therefore that it has taken longer than we would all have liked, and Bridgepoint have had to expend money on these schemes which they probably didn't bargain for when they bought the airport. So effectively, Bridgepoint were only in a position to start really throwing money at the terminal development and the serious planning around a year ago, just as the aviation industry was hitting rock bottom, along with everything out there connected with the investment industry (which Bridgepoint are part of). It would therefore have been financial suicide to commit to the terminal at that time, even if they could obtain the funding to do so. Chances are they have had to wait until matters improved in both the aviation industry and finance industry before they can take this forward.
In my view therefore, Bridgepoint have found themselves delayed in the first place by a council intent on making them do what the council should have done years ago, and that delay resulted in it simply being the 'wrong time' to commit to the terminal. I have absolutely no information about the terminal and when it will start, but I still remain confident it will do. In any case, work has to start within 3 years of consent being given as far as I am aware otherwise it is back to square one.
Oh, finally, hello back radar. Nice to have you on the forum!!
Thanks - I appreciate what you said above. Effectively yes - the Council did absolutely nothing with regard to transport infrastructure during their ownership of the airport, and as little as they could get away with regarding the terminal development. They undertook piecemeal extensions which resulted in terminal designed to cope with 1960's passenger numbers having bits stuck on here and there, but never really focussed on the future, even when Jet2 arrived and passenger numbers started to increase rapidly. In fact, all they did was bail out when it became obvious that a lot of money was going to be needed to cope with the predicted increase in passenger numbers.
Having done that, and having attracted a record sale price for a regional airport, they have then held a gun to the head of Bridgepoint and forced them to undertake various traffic schemes in the vicinity of the airport in addition to working up a transport infrastructure plan, all as part of the planning process, and unless the airport complied with the requirement, they would not have been allowed to progress the terminal. As a result, although the outline approval was given a couple of years back, in reality, approval was only given last year when the airport had managed to deal with all the council 'baggage' that came with that consent. It is no wonder therefore that it has taken longer than we would all have liked, and Bridgepoint have had to expend money on these schemes which they probably didn't bargain for when they bought the airport. So effectively, Bridgepoint were only in a position to start really throwing money at the terminal development and the serious planning around a year ago, just as the aviation industry was hitting rock bottom, along with everything out there connected with the investment industry (which Bridgepoint are part of). It would therefore have been financial suicide to commit to the terminal at that time, even if they could obtain the funding to do so. Chances are they have had to wait until matters improved in both the aviation industry and finance industry before they can take this forward.
In my view therefore, Bridgepoint have found themselves delayed in the first place by a council intent on making them do what the council should have done years ago, and that delay resulted in it simply being the 'wrong time' to commit to the terminal. I have absolutely no information about the terminal and when it will start, but I still remain confident it will do. In any case, work has to start within 3 years of consent being given as far as I am aware otherwise it is back to square one.
Oh, finally, hello back radar. Nice to have you on the forum!!