RandomComment wrote:He seems to be under the illusion that it would have been practical and/or reasonable to stick on a multi-million pound S106 agreement on an office scheme in Cardiff, where viability is already problematic.
The Bus Station, frankly, is the council's problem. The existing one is not fit for purpose and a new one needs to be built irrespective of whether the BBC offices and wider office scheme happens. It should be funded by the council's resources - which includes any profit it makes from the land transactions it makes in central square, or elsewhere.
And finally, access to the station by taxi or car is important for people within Cardiff - and that access will be maintained. For those outside Cardiff, access via train is much easier and much more sustainable. It's be pretty foolish to drive from Ponty to Cardiff Central, as opposed to get the train.
Interesting use of words there, Randy.
"The Bus Station, frankly, is the council's problem."
It is also a problem for bus users, both prospective and existing. It shouldn't be a problem.
And as for it not being "fit for purpose" it most certainly was, until the Labour-run council downgraded it. It might have been unsightly and old fashioned but people could catch buses, change buses and get off buses - right next to the biggest train station in Wales.
I'm going to quote you in an article I'm writing on the matter.
Hope this helps.