I've managed to find yesterday's Times and can thus share the latest spin on the sale of BBC Television Centre. The price has apparently moved downwards from original estimates of £300m - but not quite to my niggardly valuation of around £30m.
The Times thinks there are four short-listed bids, ranging between £120m and £200m. But it's by no means straightforward. Apparently the successful applicant will buy the entire freehold, which the BBC will lease for three years (at £8.2m a year) until it's ready to leave almost entirely in 2015. The developer will have to bash about "Stage 6" (the news block, closest to Wood Lane - due to empty this year) as a new home for BBC Worldwide. BBC Worldwide will then have moved three times in five years - and might begin to think it's hardly worth unpacking; still they seem to like new trendy furniture - and the manufacturers like supplying them.
It's not clear who will pay to own and maintain the studios that will remain; can the BBC do it through its subsidiary BBC Studios and Post Production - now with John Tate, Director of Strategy in the chair and Alan Yentob on the board ? The BBC has been trying to find a buyer for years - and in January this year internal CEO Mark Thomas departed, and the gap has not yet been filled. BBC Studios made £6m profit in 2010/11 - most of which was "lost" in re-structuring costs. Staff numbers are down to around 200, from 1,000 when they were "spun off".
The big remaining cost in vacating Television Centre for the BBC is re-providing the switching and transmission links that come via its control room. How many gun-metal racks and triple-redundant servers will the cold war warriors at the heart of old BBC technology require - or can it be "outsourced", as when Red Bee took over presentation ?
So against a potential lump sum coming to Auntie, at the top end, of £200m, we can off-set £24.6m in rental; relocation costs for Worldwide; a cash injection to boost BBC Studios; and possibly big money for new control equipment. Watch this space.
Sunday, February 12, 2012
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