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Belfast Listed Buildings

06/05/2025 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

Belfast Listed Buildings

On Saturday, February 22, 2025, the Belfast Telegraph (Sam McQuade) published a compelling piece titled “Belfast is a great city, but swathes of it are crumbling…”, in this he is referring to our listed buildings in the main, but by inference to the general state of Belfast.

The article boiled down to two main ideas:

1. Belfast’s crumbling buildings and neglected areas
2. Why do the authorities seem powerless to halt the decay?

Like many cities, Belfast has always been a hub of change, shaped by shifts in population, employment, and development. Yes, our history is marked by the Troubles, which devastated both people and infrastructure. But Belfast has shown resilience, bouncing back with new developments like Castle Court, the Victoria Centre, and the Waterfront. Still, vast parts of the city remain overlooked, opportunities lost.

Take, for example, the area between the Short Strand and the Lagan, or the Tribecca site between Donegall Street, Rosemary Street, and Royal Avenue. I’m not here to rewrite the article, but what struck me most was the missed opportunities—funding sitting idle in bank accounts for years, generating interest, while nothing materialises on the ground.

The planning department seems to lack a clear, coherent strategy to preserve what heritage remains. Meanwhile, politicians at Stormont appear to play at politics, failing repeatedly to safeguard Belfast’s history, its fabric, and its future.

Then there’s the case of the Victorian houses in the University area, recommended for listed status as of March 15, 2025. They’re interesting, no doubt, but what really caught my attention was the broader context: Northern Ireland currently has 9,000 listed buildings, yet this is only the second survey since 1974—that’s 51 years between checks. That’s simply too long.

Some experts understand the intricacies of our listed building process better than I do, but even I can see that without a cohesive, forward-thinking plan—beyond mere politics—the gaps in protecting our city’s heritage are glaring.

Belfast Listed BuildingsBelfast Listed Buildings Belfast Listed Buildings Belfast Listed Buildings

 

 

Links:

  • Belfast is a great city, but swathes of it are crumbling, the dereliction is getting worse – and the authorities seem powerless
  • Three Victorian houses in Belfast’s university area proposed for listing#
  • Assembly Rooms could be cultural oasis in city centre
  • Ed Reynolds – Artist – About Belfast

 

 

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Editor to ACOMSDave Tagged With: authorities, Belfast, crumbling, database, decay, development, future, heritage, history, listed buildings, listed status, Northern Ireland, planning, Stormont, survey, Victorian houses

Our Libraries

24/09/2015 By ACOMSDave

NI LibrariesI am a passionate believer in education and the access to information; and an article published in the New Orleans Advocate (When we build, improve libraries, we invest in the young, the poor, our overall quality of life) indicates that communities across Louisiana have realised the potential of libraries to develop people and provide a resource to everyone.

I also am a realist, in that we all have to work within budgets, but the short sightedness of the current government’s policies regarding provision of monies for libraries and its resources can clearly be seen in the table below.

Effectively the budget has been decreased by 3.9% per head in Northern Ireland for a resource which enables education, mobility and provides the population with a means of developing and red-developing its ability to meet the needs of the workplace.

Some would believe that this is short-sightedness – I do!

 

Public spending per head for Northern Ireland, 2009/10 to 2013/14 £ per head in real terms (2013/14 prices)

       

 

2009/10

2010/11

2011/12

2012/13

2013/14

Northern Ireland 11,408 11,173 11,051 11,059

10,961

 

But, we also have a school library service, and details regarding its expenditure has been impossible to ascertain in terms of expenditure comparison, however a report from CILIP did have some very telling information, and in particular the Table B5: Adequacy of Current Stock and Resources, which indicates that 7 of the 9 authorities who had responded felt it was poor or adequate for its needs.  The question must be asked is that sufficient for our children?

Snap 2015-09-24 at 11.46.43

 

Research information:

  1. House of Commons Library – BRIEFING PAPER Number 04033, 19 May 2015
  2. The economic value of public libraries
  3. The impact of austerity on schools and children’s education and well-being
  4. CILIP – School libraries in the UK A worthwhile past, a difficult present – and a transformed future? 

Filed Under: Community Journalist Tagged With: development, education, libraries, school libraries, services

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