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Northern Ireland Environment Link Logo
 

News

 

Events

 

Jun 2012 right left

    

Archaeology Project

Friday 1st June
Downhill Demesne and Hezlett House
N/A

Car Boot Sale

Saturday 2nd June
Mount Stewart
Car £5, Van £10, Trailer £15

Mid Ulster Vintage Rally

Saturday 2nd June
Springhill, Moneymore
Adult £5, Child £2

Turn of The Tide Festival 2012

Saturday 2nd June
See attached programme
Free

Cloghy Rocks Seal Watch

Saturday 2nd June
Cloghy Rocks Nature Reserve Downpatrick
Free

Country Fair

Sunday 3rd June
Florence Court
Normal Admission, Members Free

Conservation Skills Series Nature Reserve Management

Sunday 3rd June
Murlough NNR
Normal Admission, Members Free

Celebrations and Jubilations

Sunday 3rd June
The Argory, Moy
Adult £6, Child £3, Family £15

Lifestyle Green

Sunday 3rd June
Crawfordsburn Country Park
Free

Cot Trips

Monday 4th June
Crom
Adult £4, Child £2

Princesses and Pirates

Monday 4th June
Springhill, Moneymore
Normal Admission, Members Free

05

Introduction to Macro Moths

Wednesday 6th June
Ulster Folk and Transport Museum, Cultra
£10

07

The Geoarchaeology of Newgrange

Friday 8th June
Monuments and Buildings Record Public Reading Room, Waterman House, Hill Street
Free

Wild about Nature Bats

Friday 8th June
Castle Ward
Normal Admission, Members Free

Poultry Fair

Saturday 9th June
Springhill, Moneymore
Normal Admission, Members Free

Crafty Works Going on at Moira

Saturday 9th June
Moira Depot
Free

Himalayan Balsam Control

Sunday 10th June
Lagan Valley Regional Park near Drum Bridge
Free

Plant Fair and Opening of the Dutch Garden

Sunday 10th June
Springhill, Moneymore
Normal Admission, Members Free

11
12
13
14

Open Day for all the Family

Friday 15th June
Marlbank Nature Reserve
Free

Grass Roots Summer Outing

Saturday 16th June
Boyne Valley
N/A

Dog Agility

Saturday 16th June
Castle Ward
Normal Admission, Members Free

Orchid Walk

Saturday 16th June
Portstewart Strand
Adult £2, Child £1

Walk into the Past

Sunday 17th June
Castle Ward
Normal Admission, Members Free

Dead Mens Tales

Sunday 17th June
Castle Ward
Adult £17, Child £12

Fathers Day Family Fun

Sunday 17th June
Crom
Normal Admission, Members Free

Vehicles of Yesteryear

Sunday 17th June
Mount Stewart
Normal Admission, Members Free

Titanic The Springhill Story Dads Special

Sunday 17th June
Springhill, Moneymore
Normal Admission, Members Free

18
19
20

An Evening at the Gamekeepers Cottage

Thursday 21st June
Divis and the Black Mountain
Adult £3

New Community Gardens and Allotments

Thursday 21st June
Musgrave Park, Belfast
Free

Alternative Transport Fuels Conference

Friday 22nd June
Clarion Hotel, Dublin Airport
€250 per person + VAT

Poultry Fair

Saturday 23rd June
The Argory, Moy
Normal Admission, Members Free

Wildflower Picnic

Saturday 23rd June
Springhill, Moneymore
Normal Admission, Members Free

Summer Bounty

Sunday 24th June
Murlough NNR
Normal Admission, Members Free

25

Basic Introduction to Good Relations

Tuesday 26th June
RCN offices, 38a Oldtown Street, Cookstown
Free

Introduction to Ladybirds

Wednesday 27th June
Ulster Folk and Transport Museum, Cultra
£10

Funding for Renewable Energy

Wednesday 27th June
MAC (Metropolitan Arts Centre) St Anne’s Square, Belfast
£50 (including VAT)

28
29

West End Walk

Saturday 30th June
Kebble and Kinramer National Nature Reserve
Free, other than normal ferry and bus charges

NIAF NIAF
EEF NIAF
Climate Northern Ireland NIAF
 

Athletic Stores Demise 20 April 2012

Attwood exhausts all options to save Athletic Stores site

After an exhaustive assessment of all issues from every angle, DOE Planning has given planning permission for retail and residential development on the Athletic Stores site.

The Environment Minister Alex Attwood has concluded this is, with regret, the better way to proceed.

The existing building on the site is vacant apart from the Athletic Stores. The new development will replace it. The Minister has exhaustively considered options to save the existing building which is not listed but is in a Conservation Area.

The building has serious structural flaws and is leaning into the street. It has been concluded that foundations and structure could not be refurbished to provide units for modern living and working. Many heritage campaigners accept that the entire building cannot be saved and converted to give it a useful life.

The option to retain the facades fronting the streets with a new building behind have been considered. The necessary works would affect character and would not be financially viable. This option has been assessed at length but this is the conclusion unfortunately that has been drawn.

Alex Attwood said: “I said that I would ‘call in’ the papers on the Athletic Stores application. I did. I interrogated the Belfast Planning Team on the application. I asked for facts and figures to be produced and tested. I visited the location twice and on the second occasion I invited representatives from the Ulster Architectural Historical Society to join me. I wanted to demonstrate that any decision – whatever its nature – was made, having looked at the issue from every side.

In the final analysis, I conclude that the planning decision for a retail and residential development is the better one unfortunate though that is. I have worked to see if the building, even the façade, could be saved. It has been a hard decision but I believe the better one. In coming to this view, I have been mindful of the risky state of the building, the unhealthy state of the property market and the disproportionate and uneconomic costs to even save the facade.”

Alex Attwood added: “This decision has preoccupied me, given the commitment to preserving our built heritage, trebling the threshold for listed buildings grants, investing in Carlisle Memorial Church and the Dry Dock in Titanic Quarter, spotlisting and serving Urgent Works Notices. I don’t come to this decision lightly but I consider it the better way to proceed.

“Decorative features of the existing building will be salvaged; the new project will be a boost to this central Belfast location, which has been in an increasing state of decline.”

In further highlighting why the reasons for the decision the Minister continued: “Let me outline further what would have happened had this planning application been turned down. Normally, we expect owners to place empty buildings on the open market in conservation areas. But existing buildings have lay empty in this area for years and no developer, especially in the present economic climate, will likely invest in a building where it is more expensive to refurbish than to knock down and rebuild. This is the hard reality of the market at present. I had to be decisive, reduce further decline and try to move the area forward.

This is the context for a difficult decision, one reached with regret, after looking at the application from every side.