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  • "
    bcfc1903 wrote:
    I think the refurbishment of the Odeon building is key to a successful West End,make a world class concert venue attracting world class artists and with a 2,500 to 3,000 capacity you'd have a chance of getting the footfall in and around those west end bars.It's not rocket science add the Odeon to the alhambra audiences and on a good night you could have around 4,000 punters leaving those buildings four to five evenings each week.
    True so long as we keep out the Bassline Crowd, Ointment and all the other tin-pot gangsters that liked a bottle fight in the west end when that was new.
    I used to see the fear in the eyes of families walking through the West End to their cars, half a mile away, as they were set upon by drunken nutters.
    Its changed somewhat now, but I really think a joined-together plan is needed to re-vitalise the centre and its entertainment, to make it attractive to families too.
    code:half-plan lol"
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Sign on door thanks Bradford Love Apple customers for support

The sign on the Love Apple door The sign on the Love Apple door

A well-known cafe-bar and nightclub in Bradford’s west end has shut down.

A slump in trade is thought to be to blame for the closure of the Love Apple, at 34 Great Horton Road.

A sign on the door reads: “Regretfully closed. Many thanks to all our friends and customers over the past 13 years, Love & Apples.”

Only two months ago, it was announced that the Love Apple would play host to a number of top Indie acts during weekly music sessions, including Pete Doherty, The Klaxons, Happy Mondays and Mani from the Stone Roses.

The licensee at the Love Apple was Parvez Iqbal, who ran the venue with his partner Victoria Brett.

Michael Stewart, a Bradford-based writer, artist and university lecturer, used to go to the Love Apple and was friends with the boss, who he knew as ‘Pav’.

Mr Stewart said: “It’s a great shame. Pav inflated the price of beers deliberately to keep out the riff-raff from the nearby cheap drinking places. But I don’t think it worked because he lost his core audience of students.”

Businessman Len Cohen, of Leeds, supplies vending machines to pubs across Yorkshire and has dealt with the Love Apple for the best part of a decade.

He said “They were lovely people to do business with. They are very upset because they’ve run it for 13 years.”

e-mail: will.kilner @telegraphandargus.co.uk

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