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Global interest grows in Wirral golf coast plan (From Wirral Globe)
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Global interest grows in Wirral golf coast plan
1:24pm Friday 14th September 2012 in News By Geoff Barnes
The 13th hole at the Royal Liverpool Golf Course
Wirral Council has put out feelers to internationally renowned golf and leisure developers and hotel designers to join forces in the creation of a multi-million pound world-class golf resort close to the Royal Liverpool links.
The complex – first mooted after Tiger Woods’ 2006 Open Championship triumph in 2006 – would be developed on 285 acres to the east of Hoylake municipal golf course at a cost of up to £70m.
Kevin Adderley, the council’s director of regeneration, told a press conference today said the vision had grabbed the attention of top developers on a world-wide scale.
He said: “We are asking them to form a partnership to work with us to deliver as realistic ambition based on Wirral’s proud golfing history.
“There has been significant interest from across the globe.
“For the moment we want them to contact us to express interest by the end of October. In November we will be in touch with them to determine how to move forward.”
He added: “By the time the British Women’s Open returns to Royal Liverpool we hope to have the development up and running.”
Wirral Council’s new chief executive Graham Burgess said developments in the pipeline – including the £4.5bn Wirral Waters project – promised a great future for Wirral Council and the peninsula.
He said: “I am absolutely confident that this place will be unrecognisable in a few years time.”
Mr Burgess said construction of further world-quality golf courses and a five-star hotel would bring in new visitors and boost the prospects of more major golf competitions in the area.
He said: “We hope to get big events every three of four years rather than every six years.”
He added: “We have a world-class asset in Royal Liverpool and we are determined to develop another world-class asset with this new golf complex.”
With the howling wind forcing a halt to play in the Ricoh British Women’s Open Championship the media centre was buzzing with the revelations from the council.
Deputy council leader Cllr Ann McLachlan said Wirral Council was looking for a legacy from the major golf championships hosted by the peninsula. That, she said, would come in the form of a top range golf resort and an improved tourism offer.
Cllr McLachlan commented: “We have a proud golfing history and a more exciting future.”
She went on: Tourism plays a major part in Wirral’s economy and it is growing. This growth has been aided by an improvement in the quality of our tourism businesses, particularly since were hosted the Open Championship in 2006.
“We believe the time is now right to speak to potential developers who would be interested in taking our tourism offer to another level with the development of a high quality golf resort.
The land we have earmarked sits largely within council ownership and although this is just a vision at present we would like to find out what interest there is ‘out there’ to move a project of this scale forward.”
The golfing resort will include a signature golf course featuring a private clubhouse and a five-star hotel with restaurant, health, leisure and conference facilities and a deluxe spa.
The proposals also provide scope for other sporting activities including water sports and pony trekking.
Consultants involved in regeneration plans for the area indicated that “a definite market exists for a top of the range facility in the North West.”
Kevin Adderley said: “We want developers to share our vision for a world-class facility to rival those at the K-Club (in Ireland) and Celtic Manor (in Wales).”
Comments(14)
David Scott
says...
7:36pm Fri 14 Sep 12
johnr
says...
10:46am Sat 15 Sep 12
Johnxx
says...
12:10pm Sun 16 Sep 12
Golf resorts do NOT bring economic growth to the locality because golfers stay on the course and do not eat or buy off-site. They only leave the resort to play golf on other courses.
David Scott
says...
10:14pm Sun 16 Sep 12
johnr
says...
4:47pm Mon 17 Sep 12
David Scott
says...
9:24pm Mon 17 Sep 12
Positive thinker
says...
9:48pm Mon 17 Sep 12
bickyboy
says...
4:25pm Tue 18 Sep 12
Positive thinker
says...
7:13pm Tue 18 Sep 12
spout garbage without putting a great
deal of thought into it,we should call them in a few years to ask them how there getting on
ordinary personn
says...
8:35pm Tue 18 Sep 12
Hugo1008
says...
8:30am Wed 19 Sep 12
If it was not for many Voluntary Parks Friends Groups, permantly struggling against the so called Councillors supposidly in charge of this area we would not have what we have at the moment. And we are now set to lose most of that.
Birkenhead Park is probably the only exception, and the Councillors had naff all to do with that Project.
Arrowe Park has merly become additional space for car parks round the hospital or the location of a super clinic that will cost the tax payers a fortune for the next 2 generations if not ever.
Parks in Wallasey and elsewhere have become almost No Go Areas, unless you have a large vicious dog ready to crap everywhere.
Traffic Islands, maintained by the commercial interests for advertising, and just look at the state of Grass Verges, Sports Fields, and the Coastal Open Spaces, to see how WBC fail to look after anything outside their own offices, and parking spaces.
A new super top of the range "Golf Club Facility" Dont make me laugh.
Wirral_Man
says...
10:24am Thu 20 Sep 12
The spend in local businesses will not be noticable but I guess that the councill will get some benefit from business rates. I have also heard that in the previous design there was a huge amount of lanscpaing which was actually landfill with household waste - a good way of solving the council's waste issues!
David Scott
says...
11:23pm Sat 29 Sep 12
"Revealed: £800,000 in aid given to water park in Morocco
The olive and lemon groves stretch out into the distance with the Atlas mountains visible in the sunny haze beyond. Marrakesh, with its atmospheric souk and myriad restaurants, is just a 10-minute drive away.
An architect's drawing maps out where the new L’Oasis de Noria will stand. Photo: Jane Mingay for The Sunday Telegraph By Robert Mendick, Chief Reporter, Marrakech
9:45PM BST 29 Sep 2012
10 Comments
It is here – close to the city but far from its chaos – that the French company behind Center Parcs has chosen as its perfect location for its latest, upmarket tourist resort.
Out of the Moroccan wilderness will rise L’Oasis de Noria – a vast holiday complex comprising a lagoon complete with waves, a golf course, almost 1,000 apartments and villas, a spa, tennis courts, theatre, shops and restaurants.
But, unlikely as it seems, this £60million complex, which promises to attract Europe’s wealthier tourists in their droves, is being built with overseas aid money, part-funded by the British taxpayer.
A little over €1million (£800,000) has been given by EuropeAid, the European Union’s foreign aid organisation. British taxpayers contribute about £1.4 billion a year to the EU’s aid budget, a sixth of its total, meaning they provide a sixth of the Marrakesh handout.
The money will not be spent on the region’s poor – and there are many of them in the surrounding villages – but on double glazing, and wall and roof insulation, to keep the heat in during winter and the sun out in summer, when the air-conditioning systems will be going at full tilt."
Cheesy Peas says...
2:00pm Fri 14 Sep 12
"Legacy" - dear oh dear, talk about chomping down the buzz words.