Are we ensuring that all the photos submitted by Ellbrown at al of this area, Metro work, Curzon Street etc are also being tagged with date, who has the copyright and location and maintained safely. Over the past two years a marvellous picture gallery has been submitted and admired. The reason I ask this is that as a postcard collector, I also get postcard backed photographs from the period 1903 - 1930, showing groups, buildings, accidents, floods, fetes, carnivals etc. All of them without location or date or event, sometimes you can easily identify the who, the what and the where, but more often the card remains a mystery. To a lesser extent we see it with scenic postcards, the date can only be hazarded at and the postmark date could be years out, like the date on the postcard subject of the latest theme. We appreciate history, but our photographers are recording history....sixty years hence a photo showing what we now find to be interesting or depressing will be part of history and subject to the question 'I wonder where that is and what the date it was taken was'. Our photographers may not know it but every picture they have taken is an historic artefact. In fact there is almost a book in the making within these electronic pages and proof of what I write lies in the mystery that was presented some time ago over the picture of the road and cottage with the multibarred telegraph poles.yes maurice i agree....been pondering lately about things and i feel it is almost as if for many years the powers that be are ashamed of our city and and have no wish to save buildings that would certainly have been admired by the younger brummies and indeed tourists this is why i am so glad that i was born when i was because at least i have my memories and of course we have photographic evidence of the wonderful architecture that has been systematically raised to the ground and there is no doubt in my mind will continue to be the case
lyn
I thought it looked like a running track![]()
A spokesman said today: “The current date is summer 2019.
"Work on Centenary Square is progressing well, following the severe winter weather and complications caused by difficult pre-existing ground conditions.
"This important project – creating an attractive and vibrant public square for Birmingham – is being completed in phases.
"The reopening of the Hall of Memory on September 12 marked the first phase of the Centenary Square redevelopment to be handed over since work began last year.
"The final phase is expected to be completed in summer 2019.”
Costs for the revamp of Centenary Square have spiralled by £3.8m prompting a call for the 'vanity project' to be scrapped.
It comes as it was revealed a host of issues have held up the redevelopment ranging from the Metro extension to the Conservative Party Conference.
Today (Tuesday, December 11) the city council's cabinet approved the extra funding required with leader Ian Ward (Lab, Shard End) stressing that it was important that the scheme is finished.
But Cllr Jon Hunt (Lib Dem group leader, Perry Barr) disagreed and said: "I have been unhappy with this from the start.
"It is not going to achieve a great deal. It's primarily a vanity project.