£150m investment in Belfast tourism plan

Published Thursday, 02 February 2012
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Belfast is to receive a £150m revamp over the next three years which, it is hoped, will turn the city into a major destination for tourists.

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The plan was unveiled at the Waterfront Hall on Thursday and received cross-party support from Belfast City Council.

The programme is planned to operate from 2012 to 2015 and is expected to create hundreds of jobs.

First Minister Peter Robinson spoke at Thursday's announcement and said:

"The city of Belfast has an important role to play in the economic future of Northern Ireland."

Belfast has become one of most dynamic cities in the world & is clearly a city that has reinvented itself.

First Minister Peter Robinson

The multi-million pound investment includes £75m for council facilities in local communities, including pitches, playgrounds and the refurbishment of local facilities, such as parks.

The Mary Peters Track will get a £3m upgrade in the £20m of partnership projects which aim to contribute to the regeneration of the wider city.

Deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness was at the announcement and he said it marked a "very exciting day for Belfast city".

"This is an announcement of a vitally important infrastructural and employment project," he told UTV.

This is an example of a united council fighting against the recession.

Deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness

Belfast City Council will invest around £100m from its own coffers, with £50m more expected from European funding pots and support from the Stormont Executive.

Of the council's share, £20m will be generated from an anticipated 2.6% rise in rate bills.

The Waterfront Hall will also get a facelift under the investment strategy with a £20m extension of the building.

The three-year capital programme will also see work on a green economy business park on the North Foreshore site and an innovation centre in Springvale in the west of the city.

While the blueprint will create a guaranteed 200 jobs within the council, the projects earmarked for investment are expected to generate hundreds more during construction.

Peter Bunting from the Irish Congress of Trade Unions said: "This will aid civic infrastructure and boost employment in hardest hit sector - construction.

"This is a great achievement of political leadership. The trade union movement commends this project."

The 12 week consultation document, which can be viewed on the council's website, was released on Thursday.

Alan Clarke, The Chief Executive of the Northern Ireland Tourist Board, welcomed the plans.

"A vibrant, dynamic city that welcomes visitors and provides them with a quality experience is vital to the overall economic health not just of Belfast but of Northern Ireland as a whole.

"I am delighted that Belfast City Council has placed tourism at the heart of its economic strategy for the next three years, just as tourism is gaining rightful recognition as an engine of our economy on a national level".

He concluded: "I commend the vision for tourism contained within this Investment Programme which recognises that the significant levels of investment in the city over the past three years will require ongoing support and imagination to maximise wealth and job creation for those who live here."

© UTV News
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13 Comments
sean.d in belfast wrote (105 days ago):
well reach out and give me my 34p back,,no mater how much is spent on these parks after a few weeks and security guards paid off rat packs will invade, distruction will follow.water front hall !!! when am i or you ever in the waterfront hall ?..you want more people to come into belfast ? put cops on the streets,then i'll drink ,shop and enjoy belfast city centre.i walk to work past college sq and 3-4 times a week i see green glass on the pavement smashed from parked cars .if this mad city council wants my £54 pm and another 35p ,give me and others the one thing we crave,,,SECURITY..
Marty in ireland wrote (107 days ago):
20M on the water front hall! what's wrong with it? Money would be far better spent at the int'l airport. BFS is in desperate need of a full service air link to europe... AF or Luft... ect for flights to the far east and africa. I'm so frustrated when buying tickets to HK and up pops the monopoly EI / BD heathrow route and its extortionate APD tax.
John McC in Belfast wrote (110 days ago):
I've just come back from a walk in the upper part of Colin Glen, which should be one of Belfast's greatest natural attractions given its rich varied geology and plant life. What I found was an approach road littered with all kinds of rubbish with tyres and bags of litter dumped in the wide gaps in the broken fencing. As someone who has visited this area since the mid 1950's it made me so sad to see it it such a state. My dad was one of the men sent to the glen in 1967 to build steps, bridges and picnic areas. He wouldn't recognise the place today. Money is needed to restore this wonderful amenity to its former glory, but I'm not holding my breath.
Yvonne in Belfast wrote (110 days ago):
jenny @ I totally aree with you Jenny, in my opinion it's scandalous to blow at least another £150 Million over the next three years in a so called revamp of Belfast, this in addition to the millions already spent on the Titanic Quarter which is a massive gamble on trying to attract tourists. Surely the aforementioned millions of pounds could have been put to much better use by spending it on attracting industry and creating jobs and on our Hospitals, Health Service, Education, Welfare of the unemployed, handicapped and pensioners. Ah' sure what's the point of saying anything nowadays as it's a waste of time, the idiots we have running local councils and the Northern Ireland Assembly will promise the sun, moon and stars prior to an election and thereafter ignore the wishes the the people who were foolish enough to vote for them.
Gareth in belfast wrote (110 days ago):
How about spending some of that money on developing the gateway to n ireland, belfast international airport! Particulary the road to it....step out in belfast int airport and its like stepping back in time!
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