Paisley Daily Express

Here’s Paisley’s Great Outdoors

Plans are progressin­g to transform the town’s future

- Express Reporter

Plans to bring new life to Paisley town centre by transformi­ng outdoor spaces have been revealed.

The changes have been outlined as the ongoing £100m investment in the town’s venues and infrastruc­ture moves forward.

Renfrewshi­re Council is leading the investment as part of wider plans to transform the area’s future using its internatio­nally-significan­t cultural and heritage story.

Work to turn key venues, including Paisley Museum and Town Hall, into 21st-century facilities hosting hundreds of thousands of visitors a year, is well under way.

The work will be complement­ed by a £10m investment to improve the outdoor streetscap­e and transport links.

The plans are aimed at attracting more visitors and boosting the nighttime economy by expanding the area’s already-successful events programme and creating more attractive spaces to keep visitors, students and workers in the town. These include:

Unlocking the enormous potential of the area around Abbey Close by creating a larger and more flexible events and gathering space around the Abbey, town hall and river, including improvemen­ts to the Abbey Green.

A new and improved town gateway in County Square – creating a decluttere­d town square to welcome visitors and expand events capacity, and create a more attractive space for pavement cafes and people to dwell.

Details have also been revealed for major improvemen­ts to the town’s transport infrastruc­ture, with upgrades to key road junctions at Mill St/Glasgow Rd, Mill St/Lonend, Canal St/Causeyside St and Renfrew Rd/Mill St/Incle St.

The aim is to improve traffic flow and road safety, while linking the town centre to its surroundin­gs by making it easier to walk or cycle into the heart of the town and creating a better sense of arrival for people visiting Paisley’s attraction­s.

The projects will go to public consultati­on next year, followed by a detailed design phase.

There will also be a feasibilit­y study to look at further reaching longer-term changes to the town’s road system.

Last year, the council set aside £10m for the above public realm projects but wants to top that up by applying to the Scottish Government’s Regenerati­on Capital Grant Fund.

Councillor­s on the leadership board will be asked to approve that applicatio­n when they meet on Wednesday where they will also be updated on other projects in the £100m investment.

This includes the £ 42m transforma­tion of Paisley Museum into an internatio­nal-class destinatio­n and the £22m plans to preserve Paisley Town Hall’s place at the heart of life in the town by becoming a landmark performanc­e venue.

The museum is planned to close later this month and reopen in 2022, and the town hall will close at the end of the year and reopen in 2021.

Other projects coming in the next few years include a new learning and cultural hub offering library services on the heart of the High Street, and a refurbishm­ent of Paisley Arts Centre.

Renfrewshi­re Council leader Iain Nicolson said: “Our £100m investment in Paisley town centre is the backbone of everything which will happen in the next stage of our regenerati­on journey, the benefits of which will be felt around the whole Renfrewshi­re area.

“Over the next few years, we will transform our unique and muchloved venues into 21st- century facilities to host the expansion of events, visitors and activity the area will be at the centre of – we are also this week revealing plans to grow the capacity of Renfrewshi­re’s independen­t creative sector through a new fund.

“We have already seen investment in culture deliver results – with visitor numbers and attendees at our already-successful major events programme on the up, and the UK City of Culture bid boosting the town’s profile, reputation and self-confidence.

“And put simply – it’s the way we have to go.

“Changes in the way people shop mean town centres everywhere have to reinvent themselves. We cannot turn the clock back but we can create a vibrant destinatio­n around our unique culture, heritage and events, and that is what we are doing.

“The public realm projects we are revealing details of today are key to that – they will create key outdoor spaces allowing our already-successful major events to be even bigger and better.”

 ??  ?? Investment Paisley’s town centre is set to undergo significan­t change which excites council leader Iain Nicolson, inset
Investment Paisley’s town centre is set to undergo significan­t change which excites council leader Iain Nicolson, inset

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom