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Stadium Re-development Thread

bluefox68

Moderator
Staff member
Messages
4,506
This is a separate issue to the current development.

V’landys has pledged to source funding for Pointsbet Stadium.

I can’t copy the article, but it’s published by the Daily Telegraph…
 

shewi6

Juniors
Messages
580
Wasn't the funding for the CoE already committed by the government but just contingent on the sharks matching or supplementing some of the costs like every other club?
Don't know how V’landys can be so up the government if that is the case.
 

Ozzi_78

First Grade
Messages
7,172
All talk. There is f**k all we can do there now unless we get a significant amount of money.

Also if there was 12500 there tonight. No f**king way was there 12000 last week
 

shadowboxer

First Grade
Messages
6,879
Not long home - aside from a loss, it’s not a great experience.
Same old reasons which aren’t worth going over.
The fact there ain’t any public transport is a joke. Walked to Woolooware, trained it to Cronulla and bypassed a beer and here we are.
The club being completed should turn the corner, but again it’s ordinary.
Vampire V’Landys promising money, but at what cost.
 
Messages
15,212
That is the last time I will go to a finals game there unless the ground is fixed up.
We look across to the upper ET and can see about 200 seats not being used.
We've had our seats in the lower ET for 13-14 years. If the club, and I'm pretty sure it is the cubs choice, cannot let season pass holders get their seats but will allow for that many empty seats, then bugger it.
I'm a long way away from having to put up with fecking idiots of all ages, that aren't there for the footy.
I'd rather have been at Allianz any day.
 

shadowboxer

First Grade
Messages
6,879
That is the last time I will go to a finals game there unless the ground is fixed up.
We look across to the upper ET and can see about 200 seats not being used.
We've had our seats in the lower ET for 13-14 years. If the club, and I'm pretty sure it is the cubs choice, cannot let season pass holders get their seats but will allow for that many empty seats, then bugger it.
I'm a long way away from having to put up with fecking idiots of all ages, that aren't there for the footy.
I'd rather have been at Allianz any day.
If it had been at Allianz, id be having a beer in Surry Hills about now. Easy to say after the event, but the same as last year - it ain’t no vibe
We stood on the west hill and actually got tickets handed to us by a lovely sharks volunteer lady for nothing. Thought we were blessed, but no one was sitting down there. Odd and embarrassing.
 

Cheese sandwich

First Grade
Messages
5,063
Every year the joint looks more run down and embarrassing and every year the team finds new and incredible ways to lose games there.

There is absolutely no chance of a new build stadium happening in the area I'm guessing?
 

Special K

Coach
Messages
19,560
That is the last time I will go to a finals game there unless the ground is fixed up.
We look across to the upper ET and can see about 200 seats not being used.
We've had our seats in the lower ET for 13-14 years. If the club, and I'm pretty sure it is the cubs choice, cannot let season pass holders get their seats but will allow for that many empty seats, then bugger it.
I'm a long way away from having to put up with fecking idiots of all ages, that aren't there for the footy.
I'd rather have been at Allianz any day.
Mate Sam and I had a spare seat either side of us and 8 in front of us.

NRL issue but still f**ked.
 
Messages
15,212
from the link above:


The Australian Rugby League Commission has snapped up the Quest Woolooware Bay Hotel, its second accommodation acquisition, located next to the Cronulla Sharks’ home ground in Sydney’s south.

The purchase, for an undisclosed price, is part of the commission’s strategy to find revenue streams outside the NRL competition it administers. It scooped up its first hotel, Brisbane’s Gambaro, close to Suncorp Stadium, last year.

“The property is strategically positioned in close proximity to the Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks home ground PointsBet Stadium, in a newly developed commercial area,” the ARL Commission said in a statement. “The transaction results in a passive income stream at strong and stable yields.”

The Woolooware Bay Hotel, owned by property developer Novm, was listed for sale in May. It is part of the $1 billion Woolooware Bay Town Centre mixed-use development. The sale was brokered by CBRE’s Michael Simpson and Vasso Zographou.

“The location of Shark Park makes a lot of sense for the NRL as a buyer, but they bought it in the face of stiff competition,” Mr Simpson said.
“It’s a high-quality asset in a location where pretty much every single room has expansive views of the bay or golf course, which makes it quite a unique Quest hotel which often opts for other locations, as it does not want to operate as a five-star hotel.”

In the centre of Sydney’s Sutherland Shire, the serviced apartment hotel is due to open in late October and is leased to Quest Hotels. It can house up to 71 rooms as well as conference facilities, a business lounge and a gym. Quest Hotels is a member of The Ascott Limited chain of hotels, the largest serviced apartment network in the world.

Unlike the Brisbane-based Gambaro Hotel, the accommodation next to Shark Park will not be rebranded. The Gambaro has rooms that are named after “the game’s legendary players” including Wally Lewis, Allan Langer and Darren Lockyer suites.

Hotel deal activity has been strong in 2023, with investors keen to take advantage of the tourism boom and flexible hotel rates that can be charged even as other property asset classes, such as office, struggle to find buyers.

Earlier this year, CBRE forecast hotel deals were expected to top $2 billion as institutional and private investors look to grab a piece of Australia’s resurgent tourism sector.

Hilton Sydney was snapped up by Hong Kong-based investment manager Baring Private Equity Asia for $530 million, local fund manager Salter Brothers bought the Spicers Retreats brand and six resorts for about $130 million, and Syrian billionaire Ghassan Aboud secured the Rydges Sydney Harbour at The Rocks for a discounted $100 million.

The hotel transaction market largely froze in 2020. Just $682 million of assets changed hands as the COVID-19 pandemic forced the shutdown of much of the sector and occupancy rates fell into the single digits.
 

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