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The capacity of the stadium is no longer 15200, I'm led to believe it is around the 13800 mark due to the safety certificate
Quote from: MrFrost on December 05, 2016, 09:08:49 pmThe capacity of the stadium is no longer 15200, I'm led to believe it is around the 13800 mark due to the safety certificate Has there been any official confirmation of this?
The capacity of the South Stand is also reduced because of the unallocated seating.
Quote from: MrFrost on December 05, 2016, 09:08:49 pmThe capacity of the stadium is no longer 15200, I'm led to believe it is around the 13800 mark due to the safety certificate I'm not sure where you're getting this from but there's nothing wrong with the safety certificate at the stadium, in fact the reverse is true.
Quote from: silent majority on December 07, 2016, 06:09:37 pmQuote from: MrFrost on December 05, 2016, 09:08:49 pmThe capacity of the stadium is no longer 15200, I'm led to believe it is around the 13800 mark due to the safety certificate I'm not sure where you're getting this from but there's nothing wrong with the safety certificate at the stadium, in fact the reverse is true.Why else would you stop selling the first three rows of a particular stand?
Quote from: MrFrost on December 08, 2016, 11:04:19 amQuote from: silent majority on December 07, 2016, 06:09:37 pmQuote from: MrFrost on December 05, 2016, 09:08:49 pmThe capacity of the stadium is no longer 15200, I'm led to believe it is around the 13800 mark due to the safety certificate I'm not sure where you're getting this from but there's nothing wrong with the safety certificate at the stadium, in fact the reverse is true.Why else would you stop selling the first three rows of a particular stand?But now you're just guessing. Why not wait and see if the first 3 rows are covered over at the Grimsby game?
Quote from: silent majority on December 08, 2016, 07:52:41 pmQuote from: MrFrost on December 08, 2016, 11:04:19 amQuote from: silent majority on December 07, 2016, 06:09:37 pmQuote from: MrFrost on December 05, 2016, 09:08:49 pmThe capacity of the stadium is no longer 15200, I'm led to believe it is around the 13800 mark due to the safety certificate I'm not sure where you're getting this from but there's nothing wrong with the safety certificate at the stadium, in fact the reverse is true.Why else would you stop selling the first three rows of a particular stand?But now you're just guessing. Why not wait and see if the first 3 rows are covered over at the Grimsby game?If they are uncovered why bother covering them when theres a couple of hundred and the proverbial dog
Quote from: Dagenham Rover on December 08, 2016, 08:59:36 pmQuote from: silent majority on December 08, 2016, 07:52:41 pmQuote from: MrFrost on December 08, 2016, 11:04:19 amQuote from: silent majority on December 07, 2016, 06:09:37 pmQuote from: MrFrost on December 05, 2016, 09:08:49 pmThe capacity of the stadium is no longer 15200, I'm led to believe it is around the 13800 mark due to the safety certificate I'm not sure where you're getting this from but there's nothing wrong with the safety certificate at the stadium, in fact the reverse is true.Why else would you stop selling the first three rows of a particular stand?But now you're just guessing. Why not wait and see if the first 3 rows are covered over at the Grimsby game?If they are uncovered why bother covering them when theres a couple of hundred and the proverbial dogPart of stadium management strategy John, lots of clubs do it.But the main point, as I've already stated, is that there is nothing at all wrong with the safety certificate at the stadium.
DR, you agree its OK for the club to cover outer blocks when crowds are on the small side so its not OK to do the same for the front 3 rows? Surely the argument you put forward is the same? The idea behind netting of this sort is to effect crowd control without having to use stewards to do it. Supporters are channelled into the areas without netting, therefore side to side along the rows and then down the steps. It cuts steward numbers and therefore saves money.No doubt the Grimsby game, or any game where we expect full capacity, uncovering the seats, be it outer blocks or the front 3 rows, makes economic sense to do so.
Quote from: silent majority on December 09, 2016, 11:21:36 amDR, you agree its OK for the club to cover outer blocks when crowds are on the small side so its not OK to do the same for the front 3 rows? Surely the argument you put forward is the same? The idea behind netting of this sort is to effect crowd control without having to use stewards to do it. Supporters are channelled into the areas without netting, therefore side to side along the rows and then down the steps. It cuts steward numbers and therefore saves money.No doubt the Grimsby game, or any game where we expect full capacity, uncovering the seats, be it outer blocks or the front 3 rows, makes economic sense to do so. They've not been sold to Grimsby either. Hence why their allocation was less than what we've given teams in the past.
Quote from: MrFrost on December 09, 2016, 11:29:33 amQuote from: silent majority on December 09, 2016, 11:21:36 amDR, you agree its OK for the club to cover outer blocks when crowds are on the small side so its not OK to do the same for the front 3 rows? Surely the argument you put forward is the same? The idea behind netting of this sort is to effect crowd control without having to use stewards to do it. Supporters are channelled into the areas without netting, therefore side to side along the rows and then down the steps. It cuts steward numbers and therefore saves money.No doubt the Grimsby game, or any game where we expect full capacity, uncovering the seats, be it outer blocks or the front 3 rows, makes economic sense to do so. They've not been sold to Grimsby either. Hence why their allocation was less than what we've given teams in the past. Yes they have.
Covering the outer blocks with netting controls and funnels the smaller crowd without the need for the bottom rows of the open block to be covered it just seems pointless
Quote from: silent majority on December 09, 2016, 11:32:45 amQuote from: MrFrost on December 09, 2016, 11:29:33 amQuote from: silent majority on December 09, 2016, 11:21:36 amDR, you agree its OK for the club to cover outer blocks when crowds are on the small side so its not OK to do the same for the front 3 rows? Surely the argument you put forward is the same? The idea behind netting of this sort is to effect crowd control without having to use stewards to do it. Supporters are channelled into the areas without netting, therefore side to side along the rows and then down the steps. It cuts steward numbers and therefore saves money.No doubt the Grimsby game, or any game where we expect full capacity, uncovering the seats, be it outer blocks or the front 3 rows, makes economic sense to do so. They've not been sold to Grimsby either. Hence why their allocation was less than what we've given teams in the past. Yes they have.Why is their allocation in the North Stand less then?
Quote from: MrFrost on December 09, 2016, 11:33:57 amQuote from: silent majority on December 09, 2016, 11:32:45 amQuote from: MrFrost on December 09, 2016, 11:29:33 amQuote from: silent majority on December 09, 2016, 11:21:36 amDR, you agree its OK for the club to cover outer blocks when crowds are on the small side so its not OK to do the same for the front 3 rows? Surely the argument you put forward is the same? The idea behind netting of this sort is to effect crowd control without having to use stewards to do it. Supporters are channelled into the areas without netting, therefore side to side along the rows and then down the steps. It cuts steward numbers and therefore saves money.No doubt the Grimsby game, or any game where we expect full capacity, uncovering the seats, be it outer blocks or the front 3 rows, makes economic sense to do so. They've not been sold to Grimsby either. Hence why their allocation was less than what we've given teams in the past. Yes they have.Why is their allocation in the North Stand less then? It isn't less in the North Stand.
Quote from: RedJ on December 07, 2016, 05:02:10 pmThe capacity of the South Stand is also reduced because of the unallocated seating.The capacity, in theory, won't be reduced because of unallocated seating. If that stand has 4,000 seats then that's what its capacity is. However in practice trying to fill a stand with unallocated seating is a very difficult thing to do therefore the numbers will be cut for safety reasons, usually by about 10%. There's nothing to stop the club doing individual events or games with allocated seating and therefore making use of the full 4,000 seats.