People in Belfast are being asked to give their views on the proposed design of a new £100m visitor attraction in the city.
The Belfast Stories centre will use words, pictures and sounds to illustrate the city’s past, present and future.
It is expected to open by 2030 and will be based at the site of the former Bank of Ireland building at the junction of Royal Avenue and North Street.
The proposed design of the centre has been released, and the Belfast public invited to give feedback.
If successful, the project will create a second major attraction in the city along with the Titanic Belfast visitor centre.
In the design, the existing bank structure is retained.
In and around it are galleries to tell stories about Belfast, plus a creative hub, a roof garden and event spaces.
‘They can influence’
Wendy Langham, programme director of Belfast Stories, said she wanted the project to bring people together, boost tourism and enhance the city’s international reputation.
On the proposed design, she said: “These are early concepts so it means that we can still make changes.
“We’re out to public consultation because we want to hear the voices of people across the city.
“They can influence what is actually going to be in Belfast Stories when we open in 2030.”
The aim is to begin construction in 2027.
Plans to turn the old building, which dates back to the 1920s, into a modern visitor attraction were first revealed three years ago.
The old bank is just a small part of the site, amounting to almost 5,000 sq m in total, beside the existing Belfast Central Library.
Ms Langham said: “This is one of the beautiful heritage buildings of the city.
“It is referred to as the Angel of the City or the Little Empire because allegedly it is modelled on the Empire State building (in New York) so it’s one of the very few Art Deco buildings left and we need to protect that for future generations.”
She said she was confident that funding for the project would be secured.
The project, once the design and cost is finalised, will need formal approval, including planning permission.
The plan is for the creative hub to be used by writers, artists, musicians and filmmakers.
Much of the focus will be on attracting visitors to the building, with a target set of 700,000 a year.
Lord Mayor of Belfast Micky Murray believes the centre can “revolutionise” part of central Belfast.
“Belfast Stories is a project that our city has been crying out for and it’s being made possible thanks to the Belfast region city deal investment,” he said.
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