Tales of Robin Hood set to close after city's 'no' to bail-out
THE Tales of Robin Hood faces imminent closure after the city council refused to bail it out of financial difficulties.
The Maid Marian Way tourist attraction ran up further rent arrears over Christmas and is losing about £60,000 a year.
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Chief executive Ian Walker says between 20 and 50 staff face redundancy within weeks, including Robin Hood and Maid Marian themselves.
Mr Walker said: "We have had a large increase in rent which should have been paid on Christmas Day.
"We need the evil Sheriff of Nottingham to help Robin Hood for the first time in 1,000 years. Otherwise we will have to close the doors within weeks, maybe sooner."
A city council spokesperson said: "The Tales of Robin Hood is a city visitor attraction dedicated to Nottingham's legendary hero.
"However, in present circumstances it is unfortunately not possible for us to commit council taxpayers' money to directly support this privately-owned business.
The council says it had been working with the owners to try and sort the financial problems out.
Tesco rents the premises to The Tales of Robin Hood and pays the lease to real estate company Kandahar.
Mr Walker says the trouble started after the rent was put up from about £29,000 a year to £95,000.
Tesco corporate affairs manager Tony Fletcher said the attraction started to fall into rent arrears in 2007 and the supermarket has increased the rent to clear what is owed.
He said: "We owe a six figure sum with the landlord. We will probably end up writing the debt off."
Mr Walker says the attraction was just about breaking even before the rent rise.
The Tales of Robin Hood became a charity in September 2008, meaning it can receive some tax exemptions and benefit from donations.
Mr Walker has been visiting other heritage sites, museums and attractions for advice and support.
"I still believe Tesco would support the project," he said.
"I might be wrong but while they have been commercial in their negotiations, they have not been aggressive. I think they are saddened.
"The attraction broke even throughout the year when we were paying rent of about £30,000, without depreciation, but it needs more visitors, new attractions and we need to grab new audiences that we are not getting at the moment.
"With a contribution from the local authority and backing from them, we would be supported in funding bids and we would be able to work with other attractions nationally."
Discussions with The Royal Armouries in Leeds could lead to a collection being exhibited in Nottingham but only with vital refurbishment.
In a bid to muster support, people can visit The Tales of Robin Hood until Sunday for free and sign a petition to keep it open.
Since the Evening Post broke the news of its problems, visitors have increased by 500% over the weekend and takings in the shop and cafe have rocketed to record levels, said Mr Walker.
A city council spokesperson said: "As Robin Hood is at the heart of Nottingham's cultural identity and civic pride, the city council is committed to promoting Robin Hood as the brand for Nottingham.
"It will be working with other partners in the year ahead to ensure that Robin Hood has a much higher profile in the life of the city."
michael.greenwell@nottinghameveningpost.co.uk







14 Comments
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by Mr Gary Pike, Aspley. Nottingham
Friday, January 02 2009, 2:25AM
“this story explains why the tales of Robin Hood are so expensive. It also explains the greed of the Tesco group. not so many moons ago Tesco was a supermarket, and that was that. but over the years they have succeeded in expanding their empire within retail ( now you can buy anything all under one roof or on line). property & land and even finance. all Tesco want is that site to put in another Tesco express to service the park area of the city. many small and larger companies fall pray to the wrath of the Tesco empire. in my opinion companies such as Tesco have played a major part with the financial pit the country is in today. I can see it now in a year or two at my local polling station my options will be Labour / Conservative / Tesco..”
by Steve, Notts
Thursday, January 01 2009, 11:07PM
“If this a charity who does it support? How can anything championing a fictitious character get charitable status? I am going to ask for charitable status to start up a farm breeding Leprechauns anybody interested?”
by MAC, NG3
Thursday, January 01 2009, 10:42PM
“Good. That place is an embarrassing excuse for a low rent, dumbed down attraction. Let's face it Nottingham, our castle hasn't been a castle since it was "made over" into a Ducal palace and Robin Hood is folklore.
It's high time we started crowing about the things we're GOOD at, like sporting venues, academia, scientific innovation and architectural heritage. But whoops - these aren't the sort of things that appeal to the average Labout voter!!!”
by The Equaliser, Hell, Lower Regions
Thursday, January 01 2009, 9:20PM
“Putting the rent up by that much seems to suggest that some vested interest wants them out.
Be interesting to see what appears there when they have gone.”
by Mr B J Mann, Nottingham
Thursday, January 01 2009, 6:11PM
“Actually:
The Tales of Robin Hood became a charity in September 2008, meaning it can receive some tax exemptions and benefit from donations.
Mr Walker has been visiting other heritage sites, museums and attractions for advice and support.
Surely part of the answer is a sponsorship and advertising link up with Tesco?”
by Steve, Notts
Thursday, January 01 2009, 5:35PM
“Lets not loose sight that this is a private enterprise set up to make money, the fact that it happens to be about Robin Hood is irrelevant. It has no more of a legitimate call on taxpayer¿s money than a failing stall on the Vic market. How much of the profits would the proprietors of the Tales of Robin Hood put into the taxpayers coffers if they made a killing? Answer: Zilch. Some businesses make money, some don¿t, and this one doesn¿t end of.”
by tony marshall, castle marina
Thursday, January 01 2009, 4:43PM
“Come on our leader you can spend thousands on Golden Handshakes so why not one for our Hero Robin. Get the attraction moved to your "loved" New Market Square and make the area a focal point for tourists because buddy thats just about all our city has nowadays, so lets boost it.”
by Mr B J Mann, Nottingham
Thursday, January 01 2009, 4:30PM
“How sad, but entirely predictable, that The Tales of Robin Hood faces imminent closure after the city council refused to bail it out of financial difficulties (Tales of Robin Hood set to close after city's 'no' to bail-out, Post, January 01).
As if it did not have enough problems being set in a 60's carbuncle that the then council obviously thought was cutting edge art for a forward looking city (no change there then), it is round the corner and out of sight of the "castle", and now, thanks to the current council, cut off from the rest of the centre by a six lane road.
Any council with a spark of originality and sympathy would have converted the roundabout on Maid Marian Way into a stone turret and refurbished and weatherproofed the pedestrian areas below into an inviting, under-cover, castle-themed thoroughfare between the shopping centre and Castle and Tales areas.
At the very least they could have slapped a bit of wood and green paint about to give it all a rustic feel reminiscent of Sherwood Forest.
Instead, as with so many "trendy" councils, they prefered to bury this facility for the pedestrian and disabled in a mass of concrete, and expose them to not only the traffic, but the elements, in the name of Politically Correct forced integration "inclusiveness"!
But what else would you expect from a council which burys one of the last green lungs in the centre under a trendy modern art gallery and tries to replace Robin Hood with a collapsing "N".
Is it any wonder our tourist trade, like the rest of the city, is about to collapse?”
by Mr B J Mann, Nottingham
Thursday, January 01 2009, 4:13PM
“Don't forget that, even at £9.50 a head *PLUS* VAT it would need 10,000 visitors a year, 200 a day, *JUST* to pay the rent, assuming volunteers manned the tills!
Which leaves nothing for lighting and heating, never mind rates, never mind the rest of the staff.
Hardly surprising what's on offer is less than enticing.”
by Lesta, Lace Market
Thursday, January 01 2009, 2:48PM
“I have had the misfortune to take my nephew on a visit to this sad excuse of an "experience". It was awful. They can't blame Tesco or the council. The fault lies with whoever owns and manages the business. It's crap and not worth the money. If it offered anything that tourists and public at large wanted then it wouldn't be in the state that it is in.”