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The news section of Greenwich.co.uk has been paused since 2018. Please enjoy browsing archive news articles below.

New General Manager at The O2

March 21, 2012 By Greenwich.co.uk

THE WORLD’S number one music venue has appointed a new General Manager.

Rebecca Kane has taken up the position at the North Greenwich venue with immediate effect. Ms Kane, who was previously the Managing Director at Alexandra Palace, said:

“I am thrilled to be taking the helm of The O2 in 2012 when the eyes of the world will be on London and we can demonstrate once again why this is the world’s favourite arena. Beyond that, I am passionate about enhancing The O2’s reputation as THE destination venue of choice for a great day out. And I can’t wait to work with the team here to take The O2 to the next level.”

The new boss at the O2 also had previous stints with English Heritage and Visit London.

Work is currently under way on the Skywalk at the O2 which will allow people to walk across the former Millennium Dome.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: The O2

Olympic Torch Relay route through Greenwich revealed

March 19, 2012 By Rob Powell

FULL details of where you can see the Olympic Torch Relay when it arrives in Greenwich have been revealed.

The flame will start the SE10 leg of its journey in Greenwich Park on Saturday 21st July at 07:21.

It will be carried down to, and through, the newly built equestrian venue in the Park before crossing Romney Road in to the Old Royal Naval College. It will then visit the redeveloped Cutty Sark Gardens and then return to Romney Road to head east.

Torchbearers will carry it along Trafalgar Road and Woolwich Road before turning into Combedale Road and then Westcombe Hill.

Its journey will then take it on to Eltham and it will finish its three hour stint in the borough in Woolwich’s General Gordon Square.

Councillor Chris Roberts, Leader of the Royal Borough of Greenwich, said: “This announcement really brings the route to life and it will provide a unique chance for Greenwich residents to share in the excitement of the Olympic spirit as we mark the countdown to the 2012 Games.

It will also be a rare opportunity to support those inspirational Torchbearers who have been chosen to run with the Olympic Flame in the community.”

See the route in full here (via BBC)
See UK-wide route information here (via BBC)


View London 2012 Torch Relay – Royal Greenwich in a larger map

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Greenwich Park, London 2012 Olympics, Romney Road, Trafalgar Road, Woolwich Road

Labour councillors to elect leader next week

March 14, 2012 By Rob Powell

LABOUR councillors on Greenwich Council will hold internal elections next week to decide who they want as their leader.

Current leader, Chris Roberts, is expected to face competition for the job from his cabinet colleague, John Fahy, as was first reported earlier this week by the News Shopper.

Other senior positions within the group, such as the deputy leadership and cabinet jobs, will also be determined by secret ballot at the Annual General Meeting, due to be held at the Town Hall on Monday evening.

As the ruling group on the council, the winner of the Labour group leadership will also become the Leader of the Council.

Chris Roberts has been the Labour group leader, and Leader of the Council, for over a decade and represents the Glyndon ward.

John Fahy was elected to the council in 1990 and is currently the cabinet member in charge of Culture and the Olympics and is a councillor in the Woolwich Riverside ward.

 

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Chris Roberts, Cllr John Fahy

Volunteers come forward after tense St Alfege Park meeting

March 14, 2012 By Rob Powell

West Greenwich Library

A PUBLIC meeting almost boiled out of control last night as local residents met to discuss the future of St Alfege Park.

The normally tranquil setting of West Greenwich Library became the scene of accusations, recriminations, a walk-out and finger jabbing at the meeting – the first such meeting since the controversial smashing of headstones in St Alfege Park last year.

The meeting, which attracted about twenty people was attended by council officers, Cllr John Fahy, local ward councillor Maureen O’Mara and former Chair of the Friends of St Alfege Park, Tim Delap.

Cllr Fahy, who is the cabinet member in charge of parks in the borough, used his opening remarks to explain that the “situation regarding the headstones has caused enormous difficulties for us all.” He added that the council has “learnt some lessons in how we manage the parks and the controls we need to exercise.”

Matthew Wall, Chair of the Friends of East Greenwich Pleasaunce, was drafted in to be an independent Chair for the meeting and had to threaten to abandon it early on as voices were raised and attendees tried to talk over one another.

He attempted to set out the agenda, saying the purpose of the meeting was to work out a “positive way forward” rather than get in to the details of the headstones incident.

“Really?” interrupted one resident. “I find that quite extraordinary, I might as well leave now if that’s the case” It soon became clear there was an appetite in the room to discuss the headstone controversy.

Cllr Fahy was challenged to reveal who authorised the work on the headstones, and read an extract from an email that prompted audible gasps:

“In a letter dated the 15th September from Tim Delap to Lee Beasley [a council officer in the parks department], Tim said this:

‘My instructions to the Payback Community Team Leader were to get the stones out, whole where possible, so that we could use them for paving. But if they couldn’t, they were to remove them, however they could.’

“That’s the fact.”

Mr Alan Bradley, who was a committee member with the Friends group, said those instructions from the Friends’ Chair had not been discussed with the rest of the committee.

“Had it been discussed at committee meetings we would have objected and not allowed it to have gone ahead. The fact is that the committee were not consulted… and yet we were blamed,” he said.

Cllr Fahy revealed that a contract had been issued for work on restoring the headstones. A resident who lives next to the park asked if the council would also repair gravestones it had itself broken on previous occasions, claiming they had on occasion used a sledgehammer too. A council officer said he wasn’t aware of the council ever having done so.

Reverend Chris Moody of St Alfege Church pointed out that damage had been done to people as well as headstones in the controversy. “A great deal of good work done has been done by the Friends in the Park. That ought to be recognised and it’s a shame that is being obscured,” he said.

A lady walked out of the meeting after declaring that moving to Greenwich had been the “worst mistake of her life”, adding it was the “most aggressive place” she’d ever lived.

A new group?

With the meeting steered back on to the future, the Chair looked for expressions of interest in creating a new group as the council was refusing to work with the existing group.

“I would very much like to be involved in a new group and am prepared, as I have done in the past with lots of people in this room, to go out and do the work which is about putting the wellies on, pulling up weeds and planting stuff, ” said Cllr Maureen O’Mara.

But there was confusion when residents seemed to move away from the council’s plan of establishing a brand new group and instead put forward the idea of forming a new management committee within the existing organisation which has cash assets in the bank.

Council officers said they would need to seek policy guidance from councillors to see if that would be acceptable.

Tim Delap urged the council to consider its position “quickly”.  He pointed out that the London Marathon Charitable Trust had donated £31,000 towards a new outdoor gym in the park which would have to be returned if a brand new Friends organisation was being formed.

“If you don’t do it quickly I’ll write back and say ‘sorry we can’t use it’,” he said.

“It does seem farcical that if they [the existing group] have money a new group would be set up but I do understand why certain people should not be involved in it, ” another resident commented.

By the end of the meeting, which lasted just over an hour, it was unclear how a new Friends group will be structured but the council was left with seven names of people willing to help set it up and they resolved to meet again soon to plan the way forward.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: St Alfege Park Headstones Controversy

Council may be forced to pay almost £30,000 for O2 box it can’t use

March 9, 2012 By Rob Powell

River Thames at Greenwich
Money for nothing: Council locked out of O2 box it rents for three months

GREENWICH Council will have no access to a hospitality box it rents in the O2 this summer – despite paying almost £10,000 a month for it.

The Royal Borough leases the suite from O2-operator AEG and tries to recoup the costs through ticket sales, but with no public events for three months because of the Olympics, the council is left footing the bill for a facility it can’t use.

The council won’t even have access to its box during London 2012 itself, which is classed as a private hire of the venue and will see it temporarily renamed as the North Greenwich Arena.

Their five year lease agreement with AEG requires access to 100 public events a year.

A report presented to the council’s Overview and Scrutiny Committee last night noted:

“The Royal Borough may be required to meet suite lease payment for the period 10 June to 25 September 2012 without being able to generate income from ticket sales. This would represent a pressure of approximately £29k to the Council in 2012/13”

Chairman of the committee, Councillor Mick Hayes, told colleagues:

“It’s a bit rich that we’re expected to pay for the lease and will not have any access.”

The council first started renting the box in 2007, and after a one year pilot scheme it entered into a five year lease. Tickets to events are sold to Greenwich Card holders while some are given away to local charities, volunteers and schools. Others are raffled to raise funds for charities.

A review of the performance of the box over the past nine months showed that there was a £5,000 shortfall.

Council Assistant Chief Executive, Katrina Delaney, told councillors that the council is reducing the costs associated with the suite by no longer providing guests with a welcome drink and by no longer requiring a council staff member to be present to “host” guests in the box.

According to the review by council officers, local charities who benefitted from free tickets to events include Greenwich Toy Library, Demelza, the Metro Centre, HER Centre and Greenwich MIND.

Tickets were also provided to volunteers and members of sports clubs, and tickets to see Placido Domingo were given to “4 people whose wedding [sic] was disrupted by [a] fire alarm.”

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Greenwich Council, The O2

Archbishop of Canterbury to preach at St Alfege to mark millennial commemorations

March 7, 2012 By Rob Powell

St Alfege Church

THE ARCHBISHOP of Canterbury will lead a service at St Alfege Church next month to mark the one thousandth anniversary of the martyrdom of St Alfege.

Following a service of welcome at Southwark Cathedral on April 19th, Rowan Williams, will travel to Greenwich by river with the Bishops of Southwark, Woolwich and Bergen. The Millennial Service, which will be a ticketed event, will take place at 4.30pm.

Regia Anglorum will set up a re-enactment of Anglo Saxon village life over the following weekend, giving local people the chance to see how life was a thousand years ago. There will be a replica Viking boat and lots of activities to try such as coin minting, singing, craft demonstrations and dancing.

On Sunday 22nd April, BBC Radio 4’s Sunday morning service will be broadcast from St Alfege. A church has stood on the site of St Alfege 1000 years. The current church, which is almost 300 years was the first to be designed by Nicholas Hawksmoor.

Reverend Chris Moody told Greenwich.co.uk

“We’re trying to make as open an event as possible whether people can come into the church for services or whether they want to engage in the other activities as well.”

Rev Chris Moody talks to Greenwich.co.uk (mp3)

Alfege was the Archbishop of Canterbury when he was martyred by Viking raiders in 1012 who killed him using animal bones.

The visit by the Archbishop of Canterbury comes less than a week before the Church of England’s Supreme Governor, HM The Queen, visits Greenwich to see the restored Cutty Sark.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: St Alfege

Meeting to discuss new Friends of St Alfege Park

March 6, 2012 By Rob Powell

A PUBLIC meeting will take place to discuss the formation of a new Friends group for St Alfege Park.

The council is holding the meeting, which will be independently chaired, at West Greenwich Library next Tuesday night and is encouraging local people who want to help with the park to get involved.

Greenwich Council refused to work with the previous group after the controversial smashing of headstones in the former churchyard.

In December the previous Friends group was still hopeful that it would be reprieved and voted to go into “hibernation” rather than formally disband. Those hopes now seem to have been dashed as the council looks to create a brand new group.

Doors open at 6.30 and the meeting will commence at 7pm on Tuesday March 13th.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: St Alfege Park Headstones Controversy

Cutty Sark to reopen on April 26th

March 2, 2012 By Rob Powell

THE FAMOUS tea clipper, Cutty Sark, will re-open to the public on April 26th, it has been announced.

The re-opening comes almost five years after she was ravaged by fire during a renovation project.

Cutty Sark has been, controversially, suspended three metres in the air, creating a new public space below it for visitors. The space will also be used as a private hire space for events, creating a new revenue stream for the cash-strapped project.

With the announcement of the re-opening, the ticket prices have also been revealed: entrance for an adult to the Cutty Sark will cost £12.

Children between the ages of 5 and 15 will get in for £6.50 and kids under 5 go free with an adult and there will be deals on family tickets available.

Holders of the council’s Greenwich Card will qualify for the concessionary rate of £9.50.

It is expected that HM The Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh, who is the president of the Cutty Sark Trust, will attend an official opening ceremony in April.

The Cutty Sark website is now accepting online bookings.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Cutty Sark

Goddard’s Pies to return to Greenwich town centre

March 1, 2012 By Rob Powell

GODDARD’s Pies is to return to Greenwich with the opening of a new shop.

The family business’s new shop will be in King William Walk, replacing Greenwich Inc’s Great British Fish & Chip shop.

Goddard’s was established in Deptford by Alfred Goddard in 1890 and then for many years they had a shop in Greenwich Church Street.

Kane Goddard of Goddard’s Pies told Greenwich.co.uk: “We’ve been away far too long and we look forward to seeing some familiar faces and lots of new ones in our pieshop. 2012 is an exciting year for many reasons and we can’t wait to re-establish ourselves within the Greenwich community.”

The venue for the business is an 18th century pub, originally known as the Cricketers, and has had various incarnations in recent years such as the W Lounge, Powder Monkey and Lani Tiki.

The shop should open for business in April after a refit that’s expected to take around three weeks to complete.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Food, King William Walk

Costs of royal borough branding revealed by council

March 1, 2012 By Rob Powell

OVER £80,000 has so far been spent in the rebranding of Greenwich as a royal borough.

The figures were revealed last night in a written answer at the full meeting of Greenwich Council.

New borough boundary signs cost £21,800, although the council says the previous signs were “dilapidated” and their replacement was delayed until the new royal borough status was bestowed to make the change “as cost effective as possible.”

Royal borough banners on lampposts in the town centres cost £41,400 to install and £19,000 has been spent on replacing street signs in selected areas.

The three nights of fireworks that took place to mark the occasion cost £32,500 to stage, although an undisclosed amount was contributed towards this by sponsors.

Freedom of the Royal Borough

Councillors have agreed to hold special meetings later this month where the Freedom of the Borough will be awarded to Neville Lawrence OBE and Doreen Lawrence OBE, parents of the murdered teenager Stephen Lawrence.

The honour will also be given to the Duke of Edinburgh, who is also Baron Greenwich, Judy Smith MBE, George Reynolds OBE and Father Michael Scanlon.

Previous recipients who were given the award by the London Borough of Greenwich will be invited to accept the re-affirmation of their Freedom of the Royal Borough of Greenwich.


This video to mark the celebrations was published by the council.

Filed Under: News

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