Mercury (Hobart)

MOFO’S MASS APPEAL

- JAMES KITTO

THERE used to be very little happening in Hobart on a cold winter’s night — but all that has changed thanks to Dark Mofo.

Crowds gathered for late nights of boundary-pushing music, art and entertainm­ent at Dark Mofo’s Night Mass over the weekend.

See what went down at Dark Mass over the weekend with our online gallery.

INTERSTATE visitation to Tasmania is stronger than ever thanks to new direct air routes to and from Hobart, the state’s tourism industry chief says.

Hobart airport’s 2017 introducti­on of direct routes to Adelaide, Perth and the Gold Coast means the state is drawing from a much larger base than long-establishe­d Melbourne and Sydney markets.

The Government’s latest Domestic Aviation Activity report shows passenger numbers on Brisbane to Hobart flights grew 8.5 per cent over the year to March 2019.

It comes as thousands of interstate Australian­s touch down in Hobart for the annual Dark Mofo festival.

The State Government’s recent economic impact study showed 22,000 Dark Mofo visitors last year were from interstate.

Tourism Industry Council Tasmania chief Luke Martin said Tasmania’s visitor numbers were no longer heavily weighted by passengers from Victoria and New South Wales.

“This shift ensured we were not overly dependent on any one or two markets,” he said.

“We’ve seen really strong and consistent growth out of south-east Queensland for a few years since direct flights started, and we’ll hopefully now see similar sustained growth out of the WA and SA markets with the new direct services into Adelaide and Perth,” he said.

Tourism Tasmania’s latest Tourism Snapshot shows the state’s biggest visitation increase was from Western Australia, up 1 5 per c ent to 59,700 over the year to December 2018.

The report also showed Victorian visitor numbers grew 11 per cent.

Overall Tasmania welcomed 1.11 million interstate visitors for the year ending December 2018, up 5 cent from 1.06 million the previous year.

Interstate air travel was up by 5 per cent while visitation by sea was steady.

Hobart Internatio­nal Airport chief operating officer Matt Cocker said recent figures confirmed the terminal was the fastest growing airport in the country. And with a $200 million revamp under way, the airport was set to double the number of passengers processed over the next decade.

“The ongoing investment in the airport and Tasmania’s popularity as a destinatio­n will see continued growth in passenger numbers through Hobart, with four million passengers forecast to pass through the airport annually by 2030,” Mr Cocker said.

The report, released this month, also showed Hobart passenger numbers to Melbourne and Sydney were down 3.7 and 2.9 per cent respective­ly.

Matt Cocker

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