Irish Independent

Clare Council puts €300k toward new visitor strategy for the Cliffs of Moher

- Gordon Deegan

CLARE County Council is to pay consultant­s around €300,000 to draw up a strategy for the country’s most popular natural visitor attraction, the Cliffs of Moher.

The local authority has confirmed to interested parties in tendering for the contract that the indicative cost of the Cliffs of Moher Strategy 2040 is €300,000.

The Council is commission­ing the work after the local authority admitted that the existing visitor facilities at the Cliffs of Moher “strain to be fit for purpose” and are ‘now rather overwhelme­d’ during peak times with visitor numbers projected to increase to almost two million by 2025.

Already this Summer, the Council has put in a number of measures aimed at easing visitor congestion at the Atlantic site.

This includes the launch of a shuttle bus service in late June and the Council stated on Thursday that the service “is getting good usage”.

Clare County Council director, Leonard Cleary said that to date in 2019 “visitor numbers are on par with last year’s numbers. Last year we had 1.6m visitors and indication­s at the mid-year point are that numbers are holding their own”.

Mr Cleary said that “visitors are responding to our new policies and spreading their visits across the day rather than peak hours at midday”

Lahinch hotelier Michael Vaughan, the former President of the Irish Hotels Federation (IHF), said that the crowds going to the Cliffs of Moher currently “are overwhelmi­ng”.

He said: “At 1.6m, it is at the peak of what is sustainabl­e. I believe that the Cliffs operators should take a leaf out of the Giant’s Causeway and put in place two or three visitor points.”

He said: “The approach to managing the visitor numbers needs something entirely different and the starting point of the consultant­s who are appointed to carry out the work should be the views of local landowners.”

Mr Vaughan said that a visit to the Cliffs for many tourists travelling the Wild Atlantic Way “is a ticking the box exercise”.

It is now 12 years since the Cliffs of Moher Visitor Experience (CoMVE) was opened at a cost of €30m.

However, in the tender documentat­ion the Council makes the case for additional visitor infrastruc­ture at the Cliffs, stating that existing systems at the CoMVE are ‘sub-standard’ and that the attraction “is a victim of its own success”.

The Council points out that the infrastruc­ture and arrival facilities at the site were originally designed and constructe­d for a visitor influx of 400,000, which now numbers 1.5m and is projected to rise – to almost 2m by 2025.

The tender documentat­ion for consultant­s to prepare a Cliffs of Moher Strategy 2040 state: “The infrastruc­ture and facilities necessary to cater for this projected level of population increase need to be planned for and put in place now.

“The existing systems are now sub-standard and make increasing­ly difficult the delivery of a world-class visitor experience,” it adds.

The Council’s critique of the existing facilities state that “visitors are put off by queues at all service points, toilets and restaurant.

“At times, visitors may not be able to gain entry to the visitor centre due to the crowds”.

It states that the facilities “are at capacity from February through to the end of October” and this is due to the geographic­al location of the Cliffs of Moher, its functionin­g as a coach tour lunchtime stop and the concentrat­ed volume of visitors.

The Council has extended its tender submission deadline to July 29th.

At 1.6m visitors, the crowds going to the tourist attraction are ‘at the peak of what is sustainabl­e’

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