The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Council must take off the blinkers and deliver on grand beach vision

- Scott Begbie

And, with almost monotonous inevitabil­ity, there’s the cooncil once again running a wrecking ball through a grand vision for the future of the Granite City.

The cheers had barely died down for the plans to rejuvenate the beach area – and, in turn, the city centre – by having the Dons make their new home in the heart of Aberdeen. To whit, not having Aberdeen FC decant to the hinterland, but instead keep them, and the thousands of fans and their footfall, in the heart of things.

And from that would flow all manner of opportunit­ies for business, investment, growth – the wee things that would lift a tired area out of the doldrums and reinvigora­te one of our most precious assets, the beach.

With some joined-up planning, it would create a golden corridor that would benefit all of us, to the tune of a £20 million uplift a year for our economy, according to the Chamber of Commerce.

Then, just as we were pulling out the “Welcome to the golden future of Aberdeen” bunting, came the inevitable “Eh, don’t fink so” from the cooncil.

The sticking point being the refusal to even contemplat­e public cash going towards the new Dons stadium – despite the fact that building it at the beach would cost the club millions more than sticking with its Kingsford plans.

“We are not in the business of putting council money into football stadiums,” said Lib Dem leader Ian Yuill.

What, not even a football stadium that would bring in millions to the economy? A stadium that the Dons would be quite happy for the city to use as a public resource – and a state-of-the-art one, at that? A stadium that is a key component to the city’s own regenerati­on masterplan?

Blinkered much?

Of course, handing over taxpayers’ money to a private business concern is not generally a “good idea”. But, sometimes you need to engage a bit of lateral thinking – a degree of looking to the greater good, rather than the concrete strictures of dogma.

It can’t just be willy-nilly, of course. There needs to be give and take, with fine details to finesse and cast-iron guarantees that this is, truly, an investment of our hard-earned cash that will reap dividends for future generation­s.

That takes dialogue and discussion, exploratio­n and engagement.

At the very least, everyone involved in this plan needs to get out of their silos, get round the table and try to make this vision a reality. Otherwise, it will be just another grand plan for Aberdeen that gathers dust until it fades from memory. And that would be a spectacula­r own goal.

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