Don't hold your breath. |
This is a cooperative effort by the Waterford Council,
Waterford Chamber and the Waterford Business Group who have combined with the
Council’s Art Department to organise a series of free entertainment events
every Friday evening and Saturday afternoon right through until Saturday 12th
September. In addition there will be a concurrent ArtBeat project that focuses
on young emerging local talent playing in New Bailey’s Street.
These two projects are truly a collaborative approach to
making the City and its Centre a viable and attractive place for us Waterfordonians
and our many summer visitors to congregate and enjoy some excellent
entertainment. ArtBeat is also an “edgier” option for the younger members of
Waterford at explore budding talent and New Bailey’s Street is certainly
swinging to a different beat every Saturday afternoons right through until 29th
August.
It is by working together that we will move Waterford
forward and create a product that we can all be proud of and to a certain
extent we can all shout about in a positive manner.
Whilst the City Centre is busier at the weekends we are
seeing the start of the week becoming increasingly quieter. This is a concern
to the many businesses and employers around our City Centre. The need to get
increased footfall into the City Centre has to be a priority and increased
footfall on the weekends cannot be at the detriment to the start of the week.
This imbalance of peak shopping times needs to be looked at and, dare I say, we
need to incentivise shoppers to come into the City Centre at the start of the
working week.
In fact we need to incentivise shoppers to come into the
City Centre on every day of the week!
With another large development about to open in Ardkeen
Shopping Centre we will see further erosion of the possible market share for
the City Centre and there can be no doubt that this will have an adverse effect
on the footfall. We know that there are so many people who have simply gotten
out of the habit of venturing down the Dunmore Road or down the Cork Road or
coming across the bridge to access the City Centre and this has to be of immense
concern to everyone.
Are we now inadvertently creating our own City Centre doughnut
and are we ever so slowly strangling the life out of the City Centre?
I would be concerned that we are not creating enough
incentives for people to come into the City Centre and this always brings us
back to the age old problems and fiery topics of car parking and retail mix. When
we hear and read about proposal to spend money on the North Quay and other
areas “outside” the actual City Centre we must ask the question would such
large sums of money not be better spent addressing the South Quay car parking.
Is not the solution staring us in the face?
We need to “take back” the South Quay and reinvent this
space/area as public realm space thus allowing us, our visitors, our tourists
and alike to actually access this wonderful piece of real estate. I am sure the
costs involved in claiming back these areas would be much less than any investment
into the North Quay and would an attractive South Quay ensure an accelerated development of the North Quay. This proposition along with a
radical solution to cheaper and more affordable car parking would drive up
footfall in the City Centre and encourage a better retail mix. After all no big
retailer will invest in an area that does not have the creative potential to
deliver ever increasing numbers of shoppers and therefore income.
Yes, the proposed Michael Street development will help our
retail mix but just how long will this project take to come to fruition and
will it come on stream in time to help boost the footfall to the City Centre. A
North Quay development will also help in attracting “business people and suits”
to the City but again just how long will we have to wait for this development,
and judging by how long it has taken to knock down the old mills I would not be
holding your breath.
Groundhog Day. |
Well, we are now halfway through 2014 and still we waking up
to the same “Groundhog Day” issues and concerns that have been dragging on for
years and years. Surely, we no longer need to wait for another consultants
report or another enquiry. Rather we need to act now and we need to act radically
once and for all to get the people of Waterford and our visitors back into our
City Centre.
The very heart of Waterford’s future plans has to be the
City Centre and if we are serious about positioning the City as an economic
driver of the south east, as a future University City, with a University
Hospital and so on, then we need to be proactive in our solutions in tackling the
falling footfall in the City Centre.
Only three possible suggestions, but suggestions that will
have real economic impact and at a time when all we will be hearing in the run
up to the next budget and next general election is “this will create REAL
economic impact” then that economic impact needs to hit Waterford pretty fast
and very hard.
You don’t have to dig too deep to find those creative solutions.
Maybe we have just misplaced our shovel?
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