![]() ![]() The firm also bought a former Homebase in York Road, Battersea, for £70m in 2016 and is building 300 flats and a new home for the Royal Academy of Dance. “Wild animal exploitation to boost the profits of a property developer is the wrong message to be sending and we are urging the company to rethink their decision.”Īvanton, created by former directors at Barratt and Berkeley Homes, has £230m plans for hundreds of new homes including affordable housing, open space and 50,000 sq.ft of light industrial commercial use.Īvanton owns three sites on the Old Kent Road, together providing up to 2,100 new homes on developments worth up to £800 million.Īvanton already has planning permission for 1,152 new homes, 40 per cent of them affordable, and a sports centre on the three-acre Ruby Triangle site.Īvanton also wants to build 262 flats, 40 per cent affordable, at Carpetright at 651 Old Kent Road. Not only is the busy and noisy environment of a property on the Old Kent Road no place for a wild animal, the transportation and handling of these alligators is likely to cause them unnecessary stress, fear and anxiety. “Alligators are wild animals that should be in their natural environment and not as part of an attraction at a property development. “The Alligator Park and farm concept came to us after we were approached by an out-of-town specialist looking for a location for one in the capital.”īut World Animal Protection wildlife campaigns manager Katheryn Wise said: “We are extremely concerned about plans for an alligator park. Marc Pennick, co-founding director of Avanton, said: “We want to turn the gasholder into something really special for London, so alongside the Alligator Park we are also looking at the option of turning it into a large lido and leisure deck complex, and are also thinking about an artistic garden with waterfeatures. Other options have less bite: a sculpture, a pavilion, water features and gardens. A cuddly kitten park does not seem to have been suggested. They are not going to make a snappy decision. Sliding panels would enable the temperature of the alligator park to be raised or lowered to keep the reptiles at the “optimum temperature for their health and wellbeing”. ![]() The 50-metre high gasholder frame would be faced with special shielded glass, to create a conservatory. “The park would be able to operate throughout the year as a tourist attraction, educational centre and unique ecological habitat for South London.” This gives them the right temperatures to survive, but also breed, lay eggs and feel they are in their natural, Florida-like, habitat. The developer has promised the project will not go ahead before it consults reptile and environmental experts.īut it adds: “Alligators can survive in freezing temperatures but need warm weather to thrive, between 82 and 92 degrees Fahrenheit. “The facility has the potential to inspire schools and deliver an ‘adventure facility’ within the new development.” The firm’s bumph says: “An alligator park – the first of its kind in London – could be highly popular with local schools and colleges in the London Borough of Southwark and further afield. ![]() The company has become a partner to over 1,000 enterprise customers including Microsoft, Adobe, Comcast, and Uber, and has sent more than 1 million gifts in the last six months alone.If you want to know whether they are alligators or crocs, ask if you can see after a while – or later? Just don’t take your handbag, as it might be their cousin. Clients also have access to real-time recipient feedback and gift insights to help understand the impact of their programs. The company has also added two new Executives to its leadership team - Alison Sagar, former UK CMO from PayPal and Amy Stoldt, former SVP of people from Peloton.Ĭo-founded by Hani Goldstein (CEO) and Dvir Cohen, Snappy provides a gifting platform that offers high-quality gifts from top brands and retailers, picked by professionals using a proprietary gift-trends algorithm and real-time stock availability. The company will use these funds to continue to expand into additional segments and markets, and explore acquisitions. In conjunction with the funding, Hans Tung, managing partner at GGV Capital, will join Snappy’s board. The round was led by GGV Capital with participation from existing investors 83North, Saban Ventures and Hearst Ventures. Snappy, a New York-based tech platform for gifting, raised $70M in funding. ![]()
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