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Launderette is left high and very dry by tram works hole

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Published Date: 08 June 2009
A HUGE hole dug for the city's tram works has been blamed for swallowing up the profits of a Leith launderette after it went out of business.
George McGill, the owner of the Leith Launderette on Leith Walk, said he had been forced to close two other launderettes in the city because of the difficulties caused to his business by the trams.

He said the hole, which prevented customers parki
ng outside his shop, had combined with frequent and sudden losses of water and electricity to force him to close down.

Works in Leith are among the most behind schedule, with utility diversion works due to be completed last year still not finished.

Mr McGill said: "The hole has been there constantly – as soon as they fill it in, it gets dug up again.

"There's a big tram sign saying 'Taking You to the Shops in 2011', but what shops are they talking about? The place will be a ghost town by then.

"Before the tram works appeared the shop was very profitable, but now I am at the stage that I have lost everything. I'm very bitter about it."

Mr McGill was one of a number of traders who received £4,000 in compensation from tram bosses, but Leith Business Association has argued the money was not enough.

The work outside his shop has also been blamed for causing large cracks that have appeared in nearby flats.

Gordon Burgess, of the Leith Business Association, said: "There's been nothing but deep excavation work outside the launderette. The tram project can argue all it likes about the effects of the recession, but we are now getting close to the works at the Foot of the Walk being a year late. Something has got to give. The recession has hurt the launderette, but the tram project has been the death knell."

Last month figures showed that the first phase of work between Newhaven and the Foot of Leith Walk was only 39 per cent complete, but works further up the street were almost complete.

Tram bosses said all the utility diversions – the first phase of the £545 million project – would be completed by the summer.

Councillor Gordon Mackenzie, the city's transport convener, said he sympathised with shops being put out of business but said there were currently no plans to offer more compensation to businesses.

Steven Bell, Transport Initiatives Edinburgh (TIE) project manager, said: "TIE cannot comment on individual cases, however we are sorry to hear of any business in distress during these difficult financial times.

"TIE continues to work with the Edinburgh business community, supporting it via the Open for Business campaign and mitigating the impact of the tram works where possible."





The full article contains 461 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

 
1

Gina Gibson,

Wales 08/06/2009 11:08:50
The "related topics" link above refers to:-

"Edinburgh's new tram NETWORK"

How does a single tram line qualify as a network?
2

Statsman,

Edinburgh 08/06/2009 12:11:57
Trams are destroying Edinburgh.
3

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 08/06/2009 12:15:48
Why do they not just see sense and scrap this whole stupid project?
4

,

08/06/2009 12:17:11
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5

,

08/06/2009 12:21:33
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6

,

08/06/2009 12:25:56
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7

elayne,

08/06/2009 12:31:11
are launderettes still popular?never used one since my washing machine broke down in 1986,the thought of maybe dirty persons who had used machine before me was a bit offputting
8

Hamish B,

Edinburgh 08/06/2009 12:31:51
He owns 3 laundrettes yet he is none the wiser to the fact that the majority of people have washing machines now so why would you go to a laundrette?this isnt about the trams affecting his business, it is about him having no business sense and not willing to adapt!!.
9

,

08/06/2009 12:37:47
Comment Removed By Administrator
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10

Road Raga,

EDINBURGH 08/06/2009 12:41:01
change the record #1
11

Dorian,

Edinburgh 08/06/2009 12:43:17
#9 Every smaller business that uses linen requires Laundrettes you idiot, or do you think that restaurants etc get their staff to wash all that stuff at their own homes. Muppet.
12

steve 1511,

aberdeen 08/06/2009 12:45:34
THE HOLE THE HOLE THEY BLAME IT ON THE HOLE
13

Foo,

08/06/2009 12:46:32
#13 Dorian

In that case, how would the tram works reduce business?
14

elayne,

08/06/2009 12:47:47
#10 wondered why no one seems to have a washing machine in "eastenders"
clothing washed in launderettes always seem to have that"smell"about them,and lots of lint/fuzz on black/dark clothing
15

Ackey,

Sunny Leith 08/06/2009 12:55:49
#15....read the article then donut and it tells you....people can't park there to drop of items and the works cuts off the leckie and the water.

Mind you i use the lauderette to wash our footy strips, and maybe if they wash all clothes as bad as they do the strips then i can see why they aren't busy!
16

,

08/06/2009 12:59:13
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17

Foo,

08/06/2009 13:06:27
#17

No, that’s his excuses.

In my experience, the owners of laundrettes are gypsy pirates who sniff all the dirty clothes first.

18

,

08/06/2009 13:12:19
Comment Removed By Administrator
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19

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 08/06/2009 13:15:21
#12:

Does the truth hurt then?

"Network": Several interconnecting paths allowing communication or travel between many points with variable routes between them.

Since when did a single tram line from Haymarket to the foot of the walk even remotely fit the description above?

The London Underground is a network. The New York Subway is a network. The SNCF railway is a network. The proposed Edinburgh trams are NOT a network.

The only reason that this limited project is continuing at all is so that politicians do not loose face. It will bring limited benefits, will cost way more than planned and we would be better off without it.
20

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 08/06/2009 13:20:46
Hamish:

Plenty of people use launderettes in the same way that plenty of people use phone boxes. Ever tried getting a double duvet into your domestic washing machine? It can't be done, yet it will go into a lauderette machine quite easily.

The reason why this guy's businesses have been hit is blindingly obvious---people are unable to stop for a few minutes outside to pop in, so it's now turned a minor chore into a production.
21

,

08/06/2009 13:21:14
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22

,

08/06/2009 13:22:46
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23

Foo,

08/06/2009 13:25:25
22

I have a server at home stored in the basement. Upstairs, I have a desktop, which is connected to the server by an ethernet cable running direct without the uses of switches.

This is a network. It also only has one 'line' running between each 'station'.
24

,

08/06/2009 13:25:47
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25

Padraig,

08/06/2009 13:26:40
No, Alternative #22 - the other reason for continuing with this shambles of a "network" is to deny roads to traffic permanently - figures produced by tie back in 1995 on traffic flow changes AFTER introduction of the trams showed a big fall on Leith Walk, Dalry Road and the Mound and increases in George Street Morrison Street and, wait for it, Balgreen Road, just as we are seeing in the "temporary" traffic diversions just now. Princes Street and Shandwick Place were not shown at all - we now know it is because they are to be closed!

The tramline will be a big "moat" that cuts off traffic flow across most of the city centre - just as it is now!

The LibDems, like Labour before them, hate cars and are prepared to disrupt ALL traffic if it makes car travel difficult. Except for Councillors and city officials, of course, who use he "city car club" with its reserved parking throughout the city and near councillors' houses!
26

,

08/06/2009 13:32:35
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27

,

08/06/2009 13:37:42
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28

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 08/06/2009 13:52:52
Foo:

I wouldn't say it was a network. As you described, it is two computers connected to each other using a network cable. The fact that the same communications protocol as used on a network is in use is purely conincidental.

In any case, the definition of "network" in the context of computers is colloquially slightly different to the normal definition---sometimes different enough to include your simple version.

As far as definitions are concerned, a single tram line between two points in a city is most certainly NOT a "tram network". It is a "tram line".
29

totally indecent,

08/06/2009 13:53:45
Soapy Souter doesn't live in Glebe Street. Horace Broon lives in Glebe Street.
30

Cockneyrebel,

Right here 08/06/2009 14:00:00
A total sham, money down the drain, a total wash out..it will never recoup the loss of cash. thanks to the b*****d who gave the go a head.
31

Foo,

08/06/2009 14:16:06
31

I disagree. It's a small network, but it's a network all the same. In the same way, the tram is a network. You may complain that its only one line however it's is one line forming a network of connected stations.

Anyway, what's with people having such a problem with the word 'network'. Line, network, route, whatever you call it, it's still going to be built. Anyway, in the future other lines are going to be added.
32

Mallory,

Edinburgh 08/06/2009 15:03:49
Bring back steamies
33

the plum,

08/06/2009 15:33:46
#35

here! here! bring back the steamies, indeed...further more bring back steam engines, re-open the suburban train 'NETWORK' and destroy the tram...

...peep pip peep...

woof
34

Euan,

Edinburgh 08/06/2009 16:00:34
Foo:

'Anyway, in the future other lines are going to be added.'

That's total nonsense, lies and complete twoddle - and you know it!

Unless you're somehow going to manage to win several massive £100 million+ Euromillions jackpots in a row and then very kindly donate them to TIE and the council, there isn't a snowball's chance in hell that any more lines will be built.

In fact, as the days a weeks go by, I would say that the current tram LINE's future is looking more a more precarious and I predict that the project will never be completed at all.
35

Foo,

08/06/2009 16:07:43
37

I'm saddened by your lack of vision.
36

Euan,

Edinburgh 08/06/2009 16:22:19
#38

I'm constantly stunned by your lack of common sense.
37

Foo,

08/06/2009 16:51:30
39

I'm shocked and awed by your small time villager mentality.
38

Euan,

Edinburgh 08/06/2009 16:57:10
#40

I'm appalled by your blinkered support of this completely worthless and totally useless tram project which is slowly but surely destroying Scotland's fine capital city.
39

Douglas,

Bathgate 08/06/2009 17:25:15
I'm Tiger Woods.
40

Mr Common Sense,

08/06/2009 17:26:51
So which would you do if your launderette went bust? (a) Admit you're a rotten businessperson who has failed to market your services effectively? Or (b) Blame the trams, knowing you'll get loads of blinkered idiots desperate to believe you?

Congrats to the Evening News for finding at least one story a day to feed the nutters in their love of thick-headed ranting. Keeps the rest of us amused.
41

Julian.,

edinburgh 08/06/2009 17:42:40
Euan,

Over the past few hundred years this city has not just survived, but prospered through numerous wars, including 2 civil and 2 world. They built the new town right througout the Napoleonic wars...

But yet a poxy tram line running a few months behind schedule being paid for by The Scottish Government is going to destroy this city????
42

Euan,

Edinburgh 08/06/2009 18:04:55
#44

Obviously I don't mean completely destroyed Julian, but the tram line's construction is having a devastating knock-on effect on local business, local citizens, Lothian Buses and services and amenities all over the capital.

However, Edinburgh is suffering now and will be suffering long into the future unless this insane project is not halted with immediate effect.

This city and the people who live in it deserve far better than the useless and hugely over-priced tram project.

The money which is being squandered day in, day out is nothing but a slap in the face for every taxpayer in Scotland, and it is the local taxpayers who are going to lose out enormously in the long run, as it is they who are ultimately going to have to shell out for the huge cost over-runs this disgraceful project is racking up now for many, many years to come.
43

elayne,

08/06/2009 20:35:45
#19,,feilds of nephilim???you are mistaken!they were s*ite!
44

Andrew,

08/06/2009 22:04:31
WASHED OUT, WRUNG OUT and HUNG OUT TO DRY!
45

is it me?,

Edinburgh 08/06/2009 22:51:59
I always think that "launderette" sounds much more European, cosmopolitan even, than "dae it yersel' laundry".

Not for nothing does Edinburgh deserve the title "Athens of the North".
46

is it me?,

Edinburgh 08/06/2009 23:01:50
...and you can get baguettes everywhere. I suppose that means "wee bag". Another example of Edinburgh's cultural contribution.

A'm fair burstin' wi' pride, so I am.
47

David Harrington,

Edinburgh 09/06/2009 00:36:08
#45 Oh, be sensible, your drama queen theatrics really are a bit OTT. The trams for most people are a minor inconvenience. Are you saying, when you claim that tram works have been a disaster for Lothian Buses, that you actually know more about this than their MD, who reckons they are only a minor issue and who has also said the current diversions are working very well, particularly for the businesses in George Street that are getting much greater footfall.
48

simonp,

09/06/2009 08:27:58
where's Duncan?? Has he been posting or has he seen the error of his ways but is too embarrassed to publicise them??

 

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