Party rooms

Hi all, brief doubt: are able to be chosen the party rooms ? (Places where chidren are used to celebrating their bday parties)Im not a english native speaker so I dont really know if it is called like that in english. Thanks in advance.
Best Answers
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Faversham71-ING Posts: 306 ✭✭✭✭
If it's somewhere you pay a company to hire it's likely to fall under generic business. If it's a community run space for general usage by the community it might be valid.
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NianticCasey-ING Posts: 538 admin
Hi folks,
Another important consideration would be the primary audience or purpose of the building. If they cater exclusively to children, we should treat it similarly to how we handle scout clubhouses: it would be ineligible.
What would be eligible is a multi-purpose building that occasionally hosts youth parties but also hosts a variety of other gatherings, similar to a playground, where different groups of people can gather beyond just people <18.
Hope that helps!
Answers
If it's somewhere you pay a company to hire it's likely to fall under generic business. If it's a community run space for general usage by the community it might be valid.
I use a little more subjectivity than that. A for profit venue chain business I would probably reject their "party rooms," but places in the United States like VFW halls or Lions Club halls typically are acceptable, even if people would generally need to pay to rent out the space.
Well my point is related to something like thate. Here in Argentina there are a lot of small party rooms which are under magement of their own owners (one or two people) , with its unique name and prices, being by that way quite far from huge chains.
It sounds like a business however small.
A party room could be low level acceptance for me as a gathering point. A higher level acceptance would be a mural in the party room.
Well despite being in the same space both are different kind of nominations. 🙃
Hi folks,
Another important consideration would be the primary audience or purpose of the building. If they cater exclusively to children, we should treat it similarly to how we handle scout clubhouses: it would be ineligible.
What would be eligible is a multi-purpose building that occasionally hosts youth parties but also hosts a variety of other gatherings, similar to a playground, where different groups of people can gather beyond just people <18.
Hope that helps!
Just perfect, thanks!
So are places eglible for example that do funerals, weddings etc if it's not from the government but a company or one person for example a caterer that got is own building and hall for it?