it's amazing, the amount of money it is possible to spend without actually achieving anything.
MetroNet, the consortium set up to administer London Underground capital projects, was a classic example of this; LUL is a sprawling, ancient network with commercial goals and stautory obligations which are often incompatible or unrelated, are often contentious in themselves, and which bear little relation to the funds actually available.
LUL's decision-making process was sometimes arbitrary, because they had decided long ago that at times it is necessary to simply take a decision and stick to it. It may not be the best decision, it may not be the only decision, but it is the one you have taken and represents a valid use of limited resources.
of course, this is very difficult to justify in the current culture of risk avoidance, box ticking and blame deflection. It's much better to support a huge staff producing unlimited reviews of possible options; and best of all, this is at no risk to the consultant, which is important to them if not to anyone else. LUL of course had the ongoing limitation of being unable to sue themselves, and didn't need to allow for this contingency
it's important to remember that headframes are a capital investment, which represent income to the administrators of a failed or closed mine. They also represent an ongoing cost.
I would agree that Victory and Cooks Kitchen headframes are icons of the last days of Cornish mining, but the important thing is that there are only two of them.
much as people may be attached to, say, Pwllgyrngogerygogogogogogoch No 2 Shaft, the point is that for most tourists' point of view, they only go to Big Pit once. There is a finite demand for such items, and a finite revenue to be extracted from them, and once a representative sample is preserved I would seriously question the desirability of preserving and indefinite number at public expense, because that's what it means.
of course, I stand to be corrected, or better still proved wrong, over 'the last days of Cornish mining'...
''the stopes soared beyond the range of our caplamps' - David Bick...... How times change .... oh, I don't know, I've still got a lamp like that.