Tugayslongwalkoff Posted yesterday at 21:20 Posted yesterday at 21:20 3 hours ago, levi said: If this does happen please don't get whoever did the one near the fox and hounds to do it as that's terrible Was just thinking the same. Itโs bloody terrible the sizings are way off.ย Quote
Mattyblue Posted 13 hours ago Posted 13 hours ago If you can Rover-ise the local area then great as the regime do everything they can to de-Rover-ise the Ewood estate. Just think of the history timelines and whatโs been done to Blues Bar for starters. Quote
levi Posted 12 hours ago Posted 12 hours ago 12 hours ago, ... said: Was that not done by the homeowner That would explain it i suppose 1 Quote
Backroom Mike E Posted 11 hours ago Backroom Posted 11 hours ago Finally some decent (I hope useful) info. I shall quote her in full so none of it is my fault if incorrect: โHey Michael, more than happy to help.ย Admittedly all of my murals have been commissioned by councils so a lot of the sites have mostly been approved but I have a rough idea of procedure.ย Firstly, it's worth talking to the council regardless because they might know of some funding pots for national heritage funds and prosperity funds. Especially with it being the legacy of Rovers. Murals aren't cheap so the more funding assistance the better. They might also have council owned walls for your project.ย Owner's permission is a big must. Double check that buildings aren't listed or very close to a listed building. ย If so you'll have to go through a long drawn out planning permission process and it can take ages (personally from experience)ย It's worth getting planning permission in general though. It protects you from the keyboard warriors. Planning permission can involve a consultation phase, like letters of notice stuck to lampposts and letters to neighbouring homes that a large mural is going to be on site and then people have a chance to oppose it. Once you've jumped over that big hurdle, if people complain during or after the mural is done then... Tough! It's council approved! If you don't have planning permission, sod's law you'll get a Venkys revolt against the hard work, complain really loudly (on Facebook usually) and then the council will come and tell you no.โ To her credit, she is not a football fan, and hates Venkys vicariously through me. 1 Quote
Miller11 Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago In the 150th celebration planning meetings (๐๐๐) there was initially loads of talk about a series of murals around the town. There was a lot of positivity from fans, Jamie Holman, Waggott, and the Community Trust. Loads of locations were discussed and some gable ends offered. Phil Reilly put his usual dampener on things a bit, but it seemed like it would genuinely happen. By the time of the last meeting it had been downgraded to one mural on the side of the Watson Ramsbottom building in town. Yasir was very pleased with himself for securing the services of whoever did the Bielsa mural in Leeds.ย I asked, not unreasonably I donโt think, what the subject of the mural would be. I was condescendingly told that โwe canโt interfere with the artistic process, itโs up to themโ. Anyway, to the surprise of nobody, absolutely nothing has come of it. 1 Quote
Upside Down Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 8 hours ago, Miller11 said: In the 150th celebration planning meetings (๐๐๐) there was initially loads of talk about a series of murals around the town. There was a lot of positivity from fans, Jamie Holman, Waggott, and the Community Trust. Loads of locations were discussed and some gable ends offered. Phil Reilly put his usual dampener on things a bit, but it seemed like it would genuinely happen. By the time of the last meeting it had been downgraded to one mural on the side of the Watson Ramsbottom building in town. Yasir was very pleased with himself for securing the services of whoever did the Bielsa mural in Leeds.ย I asked, not unreasonably I donโt think, what the subject of the mural would be. I was condescendingly told that โwe canโt interfere with the artistic process, itโs up to themโ. Anyway, to the surprise of nobody, absolutely nothing has come of it. Almost as though there was never any intention to do anything at allย Quote
TugaysMarlboro Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago Whoever is trying to organise this. Please feel free to get in touch via DM. ย I spoke with someone who is heavily involved with Prism in the town centre and they'd be more than happy to help get the ball rolling and provide some expertise and knowledge on what is needed. ย 1 Quote
... Posted 38 minutes ago Author Posted 38 minutes ago 56 minutes ago, TugaysMarlboro said: Whoever is trying to organise this. Please feel free to get in touch via DM. ย I spoke with someone who is heavily involved with Prism in the town centre and they'd be more than happy to help get the ball rolling and provide some expertise and knowledge on what is needed. ย Admittedly put my hand up and would like to try and get something going with this although I'm not well versed in the laws of the land but happy to make up a group of us willing to participate in pushing forย something local to the groundย Quote
... Posted 38 minutes ago Author Posted 38 minutes ago 10 hours ago, Mike E said: Finally some decent (I hope useful) info. I shall quote her in full so none of it is my fault if incorrect: โHey Michael, more than happy to help.ย Admittedly all of my murals have been commissioned by councils so a lot of the sites have mostly been approved but I have a rough idea of procedure.ย Firstly, it's worth talking to the council regardless because they might know of some funding pots for national heritage funds and prosperity funds. Especially with it being the legacy of Rovers. Murals aren't cheap so the more funding assistance the better. They might also have council owned walls for your project.ย Owner's permission is a big must. Double check that buildings aren't listed or very close to a listed building. ย If so you'll have to go through a long drawn out planning permission process and it can take ages (personally from experience)ย It's worth getting planning permission in general though. It protects you from the keyboard warriors. Planning permission can involve a consultation phase, like letters of notice stuck to lampposts and letters to neighbouring homes that a large mural is going to be on site and then people have a chance to oppose it. Once you've jumped over that big hurdle, if people complain during or after the mural is done then... Tough! It's council approved! If you don't have planning permission, sod's law you'll get a Venkys revolt against the hard work, complain really loudly (on Facebook usually) and then the council will come and tell you no.โ To her credit, she is not a football fan, and hates Venkys vicariously through me. Thanks for this that's really helpful to know Quote
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