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Architect behind MCG’s Shane Warne Stand says mooted upgrades ‘don’t pass the pub test’

about 8 hours ago
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The architect who helped design the MCG’s Shane Warne Stand has urged the Melbourne Cricket Club to reconsider plans to demolish and replace the venerated grandstand, given the mooted upgrades – estimated to cost $200,000 per additional seat – don’t “pass the pub test”,The towering structure formerly known as the Great Southern Stand, which won a prominent design award as recently as 2020 and is younger than Collingwood midfielder Steele Sidebottom, was completed in 1992 on the narrow envelope between the hallowed MCG turf and Brunton Avenue, adjacent to the train tracks south of the stadium,It was renamed in honour of Warne after the leg-spinner’s death in 2022,MCC president, Fred Oldfield, told members at his organisation’s AGM last year the 45,000-seat stand, which received a $55m refurbishment in 2012, will need a “complete rebuild” at some stage, and the chief executive, Stuart Fox, has described it as a “priority”,The MCC operates the ground on behalf of the Victorian government-appointed MCG Trust, the organisation chaired by former Victorian premier Steve Bracks with former Collingwood president Eddie McGuire on its board.

The state government provided $2m for a “pre-feasibility” study in 2022 for the renovations.Ahead of the MCC’s August AGM, where the matter is expected to be raised, recently retired Peter Cole, the project architect for the Great Southern Stand during his five decades at Jackson Architecture, said replacing the imposing structure shouldn’t be considered for another decade at least.“I don’t know what an improvement would look like, because you can only do so much with the seats, you can make them wider and more padded, which is what we did in the Northern Stand when we rebuilt that, and you can make these incremental improvements, but it’s not radical, it’s just slightly better,” he said.“After all, the most important function of the stand is to provide the maximum number of seats with excellent site lines as close to the action as possible.The larger you make each individual seat, inevitably more are further away.

”The Southern Stand’s lead architect, Daryl Jackson, Cole’s longtime colleague, was unavailable to comment,One of Jackson’s last public appearances was a speech accepting the Enduring Architecture Award for the building at the 2020 Victorian Architecture Awards, almost 30 years after it had won the Victorian Architecture Medal,“Daryl would be mortified if the Southern Stand was pulled down,” Cole said,“It has become such a familiar part of the MCG, with its recognisable roof structure and robust concrete ramps and stairs that were carefully designed to slope inwards to appear as buttresses,”The MCC has said renovations would include better amenities and additional seats for members and an increase in capacity to 105,000 has been publicly discussed, however Cole said that makes little sense.

“As it is relatively rare for the MCG to reach full capacity, such a marginal increase is hard to justify when you consider the huge cost and disruption that demolition and rebuild of the Southern Stand would mean,” Cole said,“It works out at roughly $200,000 per extra seat, given a probable bill of about a billion dollars,It doesn’t pass the pub test,”Sign up to From the Pocket: AFL WeeklyJonathan Horn brings expert analysis on the week's biggest AFL storiesafter newsletter promotionAlthough the Victorian government has been supportive of the project in the past, its weakening budget position has made it less likely to be able to financially support a costly rebuild in the short to medium term,However, the MCC is in a strong financial position, with more than 100,000 fee-paying members helping deliver $188m in revenue in the year to 31 March 2024, and a profit of $32m.

MCC officials have discussed funding a large proportion of any renovation using internal revenues and a loan,Fox told members at last year’s AGM the club “has made great inroads in paying off debt, which enables the club to invest into the future,,Discussions are ongoing with the Victorian government for assistance, but the [Shane Warne] Stand will remain a priority,”Cole urged those involved to consider retaining at least some of the existing structure,“Part of my problem with it is that a premature demolition would be such a waste of embodied energy at a time when we are trying to limit our carbon emissions.

”Accessibility requirements have progressed in the 35 years since the stand was designed.Cole acknowledged there are legitimate concerns relating to the lack of disabled access to the stand’s upper deck, but he noted this could be remedied by retrofitting platforms that would provide wheelchair access from the upper deck concourse.A new structure is likely to face the same design constraints given the Great Southern Stand, unlike the Northern Stand, had to be planned within a very narrow curved site.Cole said this was due to the government’s insistence on retaining a historic title boundary that prevented intrusion into Yarra Park, as well as the constriction of Brunton Avenue.
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Manchester Museum asks visitors if Egyptian woman’s body should be taken off display

One of Europe’s leading museums is asking visitors if it should continue to display the body of an ancient Egyptian woman 200 years after it was brought to the UK by cotton merchants, as it “decolonises” some of its most famous exhibits.Manchester Museum, which in May was named 2025’s European museum of the year, is running a consultation on the future of Asru, a woman who lived in Thebes, the ancient city in the location of modern-day Luxor, 2,700 years ago.A plaque at the museum asks: “Should we continue to display the body of Asru?”, inviting visitors to submit answers in a postbox underneath.It adds: “Asru’s mummified body was unwrapped at the Manchester Natural History Society in April 1825. She has regularly been on display for the two centuries since

4 days ago
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Andy Lee: ‘It’s illegal to taxidermy a human in Australia. I know because I looked into it’

You wrote your first kids’ book, Do Not Open This Book, on a 40-minute flight as a present for your nephew and you’ve now sold 3m books. Your sister Alex also writes kids’ books. How pissed off with you is she?Hahaha. Look, she should be. But fortunately for me, I have the most supportive siblings so she’s just thrilled for me

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My cultural awakening: Buffy gave me the courage to escape my conservative Pakistani upbringing

I was 10, cross-legged on the floor of my parents’ living room in Newcastle, bathed in the blue light of a TV. The volume was set to near-silence – my dad, asleep in another room, had schizophrenia and frontal lobe syndrome, and I didn’t want to wake him. Then, like some divine interruption to the endless blur of news and repeats, I stumbled across Buffy the Vampire Slayer. The show may have been barely audible, but it hit me like a lightning bolt.Before Buffy, life was like a pressure cooker

5 days ago
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Your front-row pass to who the performers will be watching at Glastonbury

Hello from Worthy Farm, home to Glastonbury festival! As is tradition, this newsletter is coming to you from a sparsely apportioned cabin behind the festival’s legendary Pyramid stage, which this weekend will feature headline sets from The 1975, Neil Young and Olivia Rodrigo.The festival proper is kicking off right about now, though really it has been whirring away for two days already. The official opening was on Wednesday night: a circus spectacular on the Pyramid stage featuring jugglers, drummers, fire-flinging dancers and a bloke doing handstands on a fairy-light-strewn bike suspended above the audience. The extravaganza came courtesy of the talented folk from Glastonbury’s theatre and circus fields, who were tasked with opening the festival for the first time since the early 90s.(Incidentally, the Theatre and Circus Fields have a pretty remarkable origin story: in 1971 Winston Churchill’s granddaughter Arabella was being relentlessly hounded by the paparazzi in London, having created a bit of a stink by daring to speak out against the Vietnam war

6 days ago
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‘Joyous, immersive’ Beamish wins Art Fund museum of the year award

Beamish, the Living Museum of the North, has won the prestigious Art Fund museum of the year award, the largest such prize in the world.Awarding it the £120,000 prize, judges called Beamish a “joyous, immersive and unique place shaped by the stories and experiences of its community”.The open-air museum in County Durham, which is celebrating its 55th anniversary, brings north-east England’s Georgian, Edwardian, 1940s and 1950s history to life through immersive exhibits.Visitors engage with costumed staff and volunteers and experience regional stories of everyday life. The museum has a longstanding commitment to preserving local heritage

7 days ago
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Seth Meyers on Trump’s new Nato nickname: ‘Why is anyone calling him daddy?’

Late-night hosts discussed Donald Trump’s belief that he should win a Nobel peace prize and the bizarre new name given to him by the Nato chief.On Late Night, Seth Meyers said that Trump’s insistence that he deserves the Nobel peace prize for inserting himself into the Iran-Israel conflict is “obviously insane” but “at best we can trick him” by offering him a “Babybel piece of cheese on a lanyard”.He added that “no president should get a Nobel peace prize” and played footage of Trump listing all of the things he has done that deserve one. “This idiot thinks it’s the Nathan’s hotdog contest,” he said.Meyers said that Trump is thirsty for praise “for stopping an illegal war he started” and is now “absolutely livid” that the ceasefire was violated

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AI companies start winning the copyright fight

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China hosts first fully autonomous AI robot football match

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Whitehall’s ambition to cut costs using AI is fraught with risk

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Musk vows to unseat lawmakers who support Trump’s sweeping spending bill

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Gov.uk smartphone app to launch with limited functionality

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Microsoft says AI system better than doctors at diagnosing complex health conditions

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