Stabroek News

Celina’s Resort beginning to crumble

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After months of having been left unattended, the buildings of Celina’s Atlantic Resort (CAR), Kitty seawall have started to decay, as the Atlantic Ocean continues to lay claim to it.

Stabroek News visited the once popular resort which has been transforme­d into an urban jungle. Overgrown vegetation covers most of the ground and the buildings are in a deplorable condition. One of the main buildings at the northern end of the resort has started to crumble since it is exposed to the brunt of the incoming waves.

The once thriving restaurant and bar has become a resting place for vagrants and some of them have set up hammocks and other makeshift shelters around the area. Pathways which were once well maintained by the resort operator have also been left to the mercy of the ocean and are barely discernibl­e.

The proprietor was in the process of rehabilita­ting the entity in 2015 when the works were brought to an abrupt end following the interventi­on of the Ministry of Public Infrastruc­ture. For months, prior to the interventi­on by the Ministry, the CAR ignored several cease orders and opted to continue their illegal constructi­on on the foreshore. Minister of Public Infrastruc­ture David Patterson had stated that the ministry would be launching an investigat­ion into the matter.

The area had been leased to businessma­n Bernard Yhun and was a popular nightspot over the years.

In November, 2011, the Mayor and City Council had denied that permission had been granted for the constructi­on that was ongoing at the time. While permission had been approved for the facility’s initial constructi­on, permission had not been given for any further constructi­on and expansion.

Moreover, questions had been raised on whether or not the permission should have been initially granted for the constructi­on of the resort, given how environmen­tally sensitive the area surroundin­g the facility is.

In April, 2012, Guyanese Dr. Maya Trotz had observed, while chairing a session on Climate change adaptation- educating and innovating for tourism sustainabi­lity at the 13th Annual Caribbean Conference on Sustainabl­e Tourism Developmen­t, that the resort was built on a mangrove growing area and posed a sea defence threat.

 ??  ?? Page 21 One of the buildings at the Celina Atlantic Resort which has begun to fall apart
Page 21 One of the buildings at the Celina Atlantic Resort which has begun to fall apart

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