The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

World-class city hall ‘will rival new V&A’

Perth attraction has huge potential, claims board chairman

- Richard burdge

Perth City Hall will rival Dundee’s V&A – and attract just as many visitors, a senior businessma­n has claimed.

John Bullough, chairman of Perth City Developmen­t Board, believes the Fair City’s bid for City of Culture status could hinge on the success of the muchantici­pated transforma­tion of the hall into an arts attraction.

“The city hall will become an essential part of our cultural portfolio; not just a last-ditch effort to find a use for the building, but a world class attraction,” he said.

“It will have the potential to attract as many, if not more, visitors through its doors than Dundee’s V&A.”

A contest is to be held inviting the world’s top architects to re-imagine the Edwardian city hall.

However, whether the Stone of Destiny would be central to that offering, as previously suggested, or be housed in a revamped Perth Museum and Art Gallery is still to be determined. Neverthele­ss the quest to bring the artefact to Perth is still very much a key objective.

“A campaign to bring the Stone of Destiny to Perth is a pivotal part of the bid, which also showcases the city’s unique assets, including Perth Concert Hall, Perth Theatre, Perth Museum and Art Gallery and Perth City Hall,” said leader of the administra­tion of Perth and Kinross Council, Councillor Ian Miller.

He said the bid was based on the city’s “strong cultural identity and heritage”.

Charles Kinnoull, chairman of the board of Culture Perth and Kinross, the charitable trust set up to deliver and develop museum and library services, said: “Here in Perth we have beauty, history and geographic­al location on our side.

“The city of culture bid is a natural extension of this, and gaining city of culture status would be the icing on the cake for us.”

Helen Smout, chief executive of Culture Perth and Kinross, said their bid was “an extremely strong one”.

“The cultural developmen­t plans and our applicatio­n for city of culture status are the latest steps on the road to putting Perth, deservedly, on the map,” she said.

Mr Bullough said the bid represente­d “a significan­t milestone in the delivery of Perth’s economic and cultural renaissanc­e” and he was looking forward to more detailed plans for the city hall emerging over the coming months.

Very much a work in progress, the working theme for the concept of what the city hall will become is Ancient Roots – Modern Scots.

Among the first to throw his weight behind the effort to become City of Culture was Perthshire-born actor Alan Cumming who described the bid as “exciting”.

 ??  ?? John Bullough, left, and Councillor John Kellas at the city hall with designer Wayne Hemingway, centre, who is a technical adviser to the developmen­t board.
John Bullough, left, and Councillor John Kellas at the city hall with designer Wayne Hemingway, centre, who is a technical adviser to the developmen­t board.

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