Century Falcon wrote:I welcome the boom in student accommodation in Cardiff; we are only playing catch up to the other university cities.
I'd like to see some numbers to support the suggestion that there is "more than enough" student accommodation. Even the Wales Online quotes the Bruton Knowles "expert" as saying that at current building rates, supply won't outstrip demand for about five years. Students are not just first year undergraduates - postgraduate study is a major expansion area and is likely to remain so for some time.
Greater numbers of students living in purpose built accommodation would free up houses in Cathays and Roath; those trying to get on the property ladder will welcome having the option of city centre houses with gardens, rather than the compromise of either a house way out in the suburbs or a city centre apartment with no outdoor space. In the absence of meaningful large scale development in Cardiff (despite many plans, there are no large housing developments actually being built at present) this is a good use of resources.
It's a fair enough comment. I haven't got a bloody clue. There's one heck of a number of developments coming up and if there's demand I have no issue with it, to a casual observer it just seems like a large number of additional rooms. I guess if we really are playing catch-up then it isn't so much of an issue, particularly if today's student would prefer that type of accomodation. It would, I guess, also help the housing shortage in the city a little.