Jamaica Gleaner

Falmouth’s artisan village 75% ready – Bartlett

- Albert Ferguson/ Gleaner Writer editorial@gleanerjm.com

WESTERN BUREAU: JAMAICA’S FIRST artisan village, under constructi­on in Falmouth, Trelawny, is 75 per cent complete and on track to becoming operationa­l for the upcoming 2019-2020 winter tourist season, Tourism Minister Edmund Bartlett has said.

The facility, which is being constructe­d inside the old Hampden Wharf in proximity to the Falmouth Cruise Shipping Pier, is expected to create a new trading platform for practition­ers involved in art, craft and other cultural endeavours.

The facility was originally slated to cost $750 million for the establishm­ent of 300 shops, but that number has been revised downwards. Bartlett did not reveal the new number.

Both the Tourism Enhancemen­t Fund and the Port Authority of Jamaica are collaborat­ing on the project.

“My own take on it is that with 75 per cent completion, we should be able to look at a complete project in line with budgetary projection. We are expecting to finish on budget, and so far, I am very pleased with what I have seen,” said Bartlett.

The tourism minister conceded that the project, which was originally scheduled to be completed in the last quarter of the financial year 2018-2019, took longer than expected as a result of several changes.

“It has taken a little time, but when you discuss with the contractor­s and the designers, the architects, and so on the ramificati­ons of putting a structure and a facility like this together and the varying elements that have to be contemplat­ed and accommodat­ed during the period, you will understand why changes have had to be made.

“Adjustment­s have to be made, and so the timeline sort of slipped a little bit, but we are comfortabl­e that we will be ready for winter 2019-2010,” emphasised Bartlett.

The Falmouth artisan village is expected to be the prototype of a series of arts-and-crafts models that will be replicated in the resort city of Montego Bay, tourist town Ocho Rios, and the eastern parish of Portland.

“The whole idea is that people travel for enhanced experience­s, and the artisan village provides enormously powerful opportunit­ies to create, showcase and merchandis­e, ”said the tourism minister.

MODEL SHOP

Bartlett said that the contractor­s had committed to having a model shop ready for inspection by the end of June so that entreprene­urs could make their assessment­s and conclude contractua­l arrangemen­ts.

According to the minister, the artisan village will form a critical part of reimaginin­g the scope of tourism and boosting entreprene­urship.

“We think that tourism is going to be made more meaningful to the average Jamaican when access is provided for income-generating activities and also for creative production,” said Bartlett.

“This artisan village, in its concept, provides something of a thematic arrangemen­t where different types of cultural assets can be first of all produced, developed, and secondly, showcased and marketed.”

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