It was inevitable, really, that it would be closed permanently; at the end of the day, it was a white elephant with little to attract visitors, and opening hours were pretty restricted. As a community arts showcase, it was OK if you like that sort of thing, but I don't think it had a lot of general appeal. That said, it has clocked over 1m visitors, but it's not somewhere you'd want to revisit. It was way over budget in construction and the local council had to bail it out financially. They had talked about an entrance fee of £6 at one point - that would have been a total rip-off.
Mrs O and I visited it about 3 years back. The lighting was weird and the loos were disgusting. The café on the ground floor was nothing much to write home about. Some of the interactive exhibitions didn't work very well, and the day we went the top two floors were closed. There were exhibitions of photographs and a kids project, but there seemed to be a focus on teenage sexual awareness and yoof culture, from what I remember. It was interesting to have been, though.
It was becoming more popular in the latter days and various community groups used to meet in there. In future, It's going to be a 6th form college which is a bit of a
as they have recently built a huge edifice of a 6th form college just down the ring-road.
I think the locals were pretty cheesed off it cost what it did when it was being constructed, and thought it a bit weird when it was first opened, but latterly came to embrace it as a local landmark.
A local council selling off / disposing of assets (at a loss) ..... well, Birmingham City Council are now having to sell off the NEC to pay for financial mismanagement and the new showcase Central Library which some might describe as a vanity project - I'll remain on the fence over that!