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Off Topic Hull: City of Culture

Discussion in 'Hull City' started by originallambrettaman, Feb 10, 2014.

  1. spesupersydera

    spesupersydera Well-Known Member

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    <laugh>
     
    #1641
  2. Sir Cheshire Ben

    Sir Cheshire Ben Well-Known Member

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    #1642
    dennisboothstash likes this.
  3. Kempton

    Kempton Well-Known Member

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    One sad **** is that desperately full of hate for us that he thinks a minutes applause for Ryan Mason is a bit much. :emoticon-0173-middl
     
    #1643
  4. City Man

    City Man Well-Known Member

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    Happily Ryan is conscious, talking and improving rapidly.
    Not sure applause is necessary, tbh.
     
    #1644
  5. PLT

    PLT Well-Known Member

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    What kind of sad **** would question this.

    As if it was ever meant to be actually used as Braille ffs.

    Of course it's too big. If it was fingertip sized no ****er would see it.
     
    #1645
  6. City Man

    City Man Well-Known Member

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    The blind leading the unsighted.
    Writ large.
     
    #1646
  7. dennisboothstash

    dennisboothstash Well-Known Member

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    I like the slabs
    Article reads like a right pedant having a moment in the spotlight
    I assumed they were Braille but wasn't expecting blind poetry fans to be crawling round reading it!
     
    #1647
    PLT likes this.
  8. askewshair

    askewshair Well-Known Member

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    Great to see we are been inclusive.
    See who we have lined up for some summer events
     
    #1648
  9. John Ex Aberdeen now E.R.

    John Ex Aberdeen now E.R. Well-Known Member

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    This looks very interesting, and a cool idea.

    Date set for opening of boutique Hideout hotel in heart of Hull's Old Town
    By Hull Daily Mail | Posted: January 26, 2017

    By Hannah Robinson

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    BOUTIQUE: Georgia Allenby outside the Hideout Hotel site.

    Date set for opening of boutique Hideout hotel in heart of Hull





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      BOUTIQUE: Georgia Allenby outside the Hideout Hotel site.

    Comments (0)
    The date for the opening of a boutique apartment hotel in the heart of Hull's Old Town has been set as the city welcomes a rush of City of Culture visitors.

    Hull-based developer Allenby Commercial is opening the region's first boutique venue, Hideout Hotel, in Trinity Square, in May, and will start taking online bookings next month.


    It has used its own construction teams and local suppliers to convert the derelict three floors of retail and office units into a high-class development of 15 one and two-bedroom apartments.


    image: http://www.hulldailymail.co.uk/images/localworld/ugc-images/276270/binaries/hideout.png

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    Hotelier Georgia Allenby said: "Everything is on track and we can't wait for Hideout to open. It's a fantastic location and a perfect fit with all the amazing things that are happening in our city."

    More news: Seal spotted sunbathing near The Deep

    Ms Allenby said the company was looking forward to supporting surrounding businesses in the area, believing they will bring in trade because they will not be offering food or drink at the hotel.


    image: http://www.hulldailymail.co.uk/images/localworld/ugc-images/276270/binaries/30061841.jpg

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    "Hideout Hotel will support a wide range of local businesses," she said.

    "Bars, restaurants and shops will benefit because we don't intend to offer a food and drink service, while furniture makers and artists will also benefit because we are incorporating their work into the building."

    More news: The seven wonders of Hull

    The owners are confident that a "fashionable city" like Hull, which featured in Rough Guides top ten cities to visit in 2016, and hosted the UK's most visited UK attraction in January Made In Hull, will make the hotel appealing to tourists and businesses.

    Hideout Hotel is within walking distance of the marina and Fruit Market area which has become Hull's main festival district.



    The hotel promises to give views of Holy Trinity Church.


    It can accommodate around 40 guests, with the property designed so that each apartment has a direct view of Holy Trinity.

    Read more: Radio 1 Big Weekend shows Hull is 'THE place to be' in 2017 says City of Culture boss

    Each apartment includes a living/dining area, a workspace and a kitchen, equipped with sink, fridge, dishwasher, microwave, oven, kettle and more.

    Guests will also be able to book wedding packages and other special events and can order hampers, cycle hire and other services.


    image: http://www.hulldailymail.co.uk/images/localworld/ugc-images/276270/binaries/hideout hotel sign.png

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    Ms Allenby said: "We wanted to create the sort of place that we'd book ourselves when staying out of town.

    "Hull has so much to offer, I want everyone who visits to love it like I do, but this is so much better because everything is right on the doorstep.

    More news:

    "There are many quirky pubs, café bars and restaurants around the Marina, in Princes Dock Street and throughout the Old Town, which is perfect for an apartment hotel.

    "It means we will provide a modern, quality space with a vintage character where people are comfortable to eat in but have all sorts of nearby options if they go out.

    Take a walk around Hull city centre without the barriers

    "We want to give visitors to the city an affordable, quality, easy experience in the midst of a stunning location - just as the whole world is watching."

    ://www.hulldailymail.co.uk/date-set-for-opening-of-boutique-hideout-hotel-in-heart-of-hull-s-old-town/story-30085628-detail/story.html
     
    #1649
  10. Bunny

    Bunny Well-Known Member

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    I spent 2hrs looking for the nipple
     
    #1650

  11. Girt Bucket

    Girt Bucket Well-Known Member

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    Lip Reading.
     
    #1651
  12. Dr.Stanley O'Google, HCFC

    Dr.Stanley O'Google, HCFC Well-Known Member

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    I came out of a vagina many years ago. I've spent many years trying to get back in.
     
    #1652
  13. originallambrettaman

    originallambrettaman Mod Moderator
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    Dead Bod has gone on display at Humber St Gallery...

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    #1653
    GLP, Plum, originalminority and 5 others like this.
  14. Party Hull!

    Party Hull! Well-Known Member

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    Just noticed from my vantage point at home that the tidal barrier appears to be having a light display of some sort on it. Not seen that before.

    COC related??
     
    #1654
  15. Plum

    Plum Well-Known Member

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    It's a pity they're not all wearing Dead Bod t-shirts.
     
    #1655
    GLP likes this.
  16. BrAdY

    BrAdY Well-Known Member

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    the hideout hotel.. the hotel for promiscuous people?
     
    #1656
  17. originallambrettaman

    originallambrettaman Mod Moderator
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    The Good Old Days window display at Boyes Ezzle Rerd...

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    #1657
  18. Plum

    Plum Well-Known Member

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    Window dressing never was Boyes strongest suit.
     
    #1658
    Edelman likes this.
  19. John Ex Aberdeen now E.R.

    John Ex Aberdeen now E.R. Well-Known Member

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    http://www.spectator.co.uk/2017/02/how-hull-won-me-over/

    How Hull won me over

    James Walton is surprised how much he enjoys himself at the City of Culture, as he is swept along by the port’s newly rediscovered sense of civic pride
    James Walton
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    On the waterfront: The Deep, Hull


    In early January, lastminute.com recommended its top 15 destinations for 2017. In 12th spot, just above Montreal, Croatia and Japan, was Hull. And if you’re tempted to opt for a snooty chuckle at this point, my advice would be to go to Hull — because, judging from my recent experience, even on a cold January weekend, the place is buzzing with a hugely infectious, if still slightly bashful, sense of rediscovered civic pride. ‘I’ve lived here for 50 years,’ one man told me, ‘and this is the greatest thing that’s happened to the city in my time.’

    The ‘this’ he’s referring to is, of course, Hull’s status as the UK City of Culture for 2017. When the government announced the news four years ago, it was greeted with amusement by some people — not all of them living elsewhere. (‘You’re only here for the culture,’ became a regular chant at Hull City home matches, especially when London teams were visiting.)


    The reasons for this initial self-deprecating defensiveness aren’t hard to find. For one thing, Hullensians — I was repeatedly told — have an inbuilt determination not to be impressed by anything too fancy. For another, the past 80-odd years have done plenty to make the city’s feelings of being either neglected or scorned by the rest of the country entirely understandable.

    As the locals will soon tell you — but as hardly anybody else seems to know — Hull was second only to London as Britain’s most bombed city during the Blitz. The 1970s Cod Wars wiped out the fishing industry on which it largely depended. In 2003, the bestselling book Crap Towns chortlingly named Hull the crappest UK town of all — something the inhabitants still try to laugh off, but which clearly stung. Then, when the City of Culture year began, the Sun chose to mark the occasion with the headline ‘Scrapital of Culture’ and pictures of drunk young Hullensians on New Year’s Eve. (Personally, I wouldn’t want to live in a city that didn’t have drunk people in it on New Year’s Eve — but even if I did, I doubt I’d find one.)



    And yet last Sunday morning, there were long queues outside the Ferens art gallery in the town centre, after a week in which it had already had 60,000 visitors — or more than a tenth of the total for an average year. Meanwhile, virtually everyone I met/randomly accosted had found something in the City of Culture that captured their imagination.

    For Leah, dressed as Catwoman and having a cigarette outside the Yates’s pub, it was the indie bands that are coming. For Suzi, in Ye Olde White Harte — a favourite pub of Philip Larkin’s — it was the effect on her six-year-old daughter of the models of tiger moths scattered across the city in memory of Hull’s Amy Johnson. ‘She’s completely obsessed with them,’ Suzi told me — adding that when she and her husband come into town these days, they’re starting to look for what’s going on culturally, rather than just having a drink.

    So why the startling change in attitude? Well, the director of Hull City of Culture is Martin Green, the man behind the London Olympic ceremonies, and here he was wise enough to repeat the same tactic of getting the locals on side first. The centrepiece of a week-long launch called Made in Hull was a film montage of the city’s achievements screened on all the grand buildings around Victoria Square — and aimed squarely at Hullensians. Just as the 2012 Olympics opening ceremony was happy to baffle non-Brits with say, footage of a weather forecaster pooh-poohing the idea of a hurricane, so Made in Hull threw in such things as the goal that sent Hull City into the Premier League for the first time. As the film concluded with the words ‘We are Hull’, most of the audience were apparently in tears — and even beginning to think their city might be pretty good after all.

    That week, Made in Hull had had more visitors than the British Museum, the National Gallery and the Natural History Museum combined. But what, people wondered, would happen next? The answer turned out to be a 75-metre wind-turbine blade, made at the recently opened Siemens factory, and secretly smuggled into Victoria Square overnight. Cunningly, this combines the optimism produced by the creation of new jobs, a handy conversation starter, and a distinctly beautiful object in its own right.

    Not, needless to say, that Hull didn’t have anything cultural to offer before. There is, for example, its long tradition of poetry, from Marvell to Larkin. Less grandly, there’s also the New Adelphi club, a small independent music venue of the classic but increasingly rare kind, and a Hull institution for 35 years. As luck would have it, when I went on Friday, the headliners were CrackTown, a local band playing their farewell gig. Admittedly, it wasn’t difficult to see why mainstream success has eluded them (‘This next song’s about the utter futility of all human endeavour’). Nonetheless, their stirring mix of country, rockabilly and blues with often very funny lyrics — plus the warmth of the audience — made for a wholly memorable night.

    But even at the sort of Hull event that’s been going on for years, the City of Culture was never far away. During the gig, band member the Silver Fox, whose duties are described as ‘harmonica, vocals, disdain’, gave it several non-disdainful mentions — and afterwards, he proved positively starry-eyed on the subject. ‘The start it’s had…’ he said to me, with a disbelieving shake of the head. ‘If they can keep this momentum going, it will make people here feel very differently about Hull — and themselves.’

    In fact, even at chucking out time on Saturday night, the City of Culture was impossible to avoid. Some of the punters (who, despite the Sun’s verdict, seemed a jolly lot to me) were going off to look at the Blade. One young woman threw a plastic glass in the air — and when it clattered on the cobblestones, her friend adopted a tone of mock reproach. ‘City of Culture!’ she said sternly.

    On Sunday afternoon at the university, the impact was more orthodox, but just as striking. Lines of Thought, an exhibition of drawings from, among others, Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, Degas and Picasso, is curated by John Bernasconi: a long-serving lecturer in art history and not a man, it seems fair to say, likely to be found outside Yates’s with a *** on. Yet, in his quieter way, he too is equally enjoying the City of Culture effect.

    ‘It’s rather exceeded all expectations,’ he tells me. ‘We’ve had queues outside before we open. I don’t think any of us quite believed the City of Culture’s figures [in advance] but they’re looking to be absolutely right. It has caught fire.’ So, I wonder, has the success of the first couple of weeks come as a surprise, as well as an obvious relief, to the organisers? ‘I think that would be fair,’ he replies.

    Perhaps because of a residual snootiness of my own, this is not a sentence I necessarily thought I’d write before I went — but it may well be that something remarkable is going on in Hull.
     
    #1659
  20. dennisboothstash

    dennisboothstash Well-Known Member

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    Excellent piece
     
    #1660

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