The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)
Design team for £12 million Perth illuminations.
EXCLUSIVE: City landmarks will be transformed with illuminations
The design team behind dazzling illuminations at Blackpool and Edinburgh Castle has been handpicked to transform Perth into Scotland’s “City of Light”, The Courier can reveal.
The multi-million-pound project, which was first announced last summer, will see landmark buildings lit with colourful spotlights and moving projections.
Perth and Kinross Council has now struck a deal with Lancashire-based LITE Ltd to design and install the set-up over the next six years.
The local authority has already ringfenced £5 million towards the £12m project and hopes to make up much of the remaining amount from local businesses, property owners and other funding sources including the Scottish Government.
Initially, the plan proved controversial with many locals balking at the hefty price tag. However, the council believes a pilot scheme on High Street and the success of this year’s Norie-Miller Trail has swayed public opinion.
David Robertson from LITE said: “This is an exciting opportunity and we are looking forward to demonstrating the impact that modern lighting technology can have in our city centres.”
Recently, the company worked its magic on Dudley town centre, bathing the pedestrianised area in blue and purple lights.
The firm was also brought in by Historic Scotland to illuminate Edinburgh Castle. The LED fixture means that the colour of the castle can be changed at the touch of a button.
Other notable works include a new weather-proof lighting system at Blackpool’s waterfront and a transformation of Dumbarton Bridge.
It is hoped the City of Light plan will reinvigorate Perth’s flagging nightlife, boosting local restaurants, clubs and bars.
It is also hoped that lighting up pedestrianised precincts, alleyways and buildings will help improve public safety, by reducing crime and vandalism.
Draft designs were released last year, showing how the scheme could look.
Councillors agreed to spend £100,000 lighting up the local authority’s High Street HQ, which were turned gold earlier this year to mark Childhood Cancer Awareness Month.
Other sites which could be illuminated include Queen’s Bridge, the main city centre precinct and Kinnoull Hill tower.
Permanent infrastructure could be installed to host regular lighting events at the riverside.
Around 50,000 people visited the Norie-Miller Trail in January, surpassing all expectations.
A council spokeswoman said: “One of the key ambitions of the City Plan is to develop the city’s cultural offering and its night time economy in particular.
“Therefore, both effective functional and decorative lighting of the public realm and key landmarks are seen as central to the ambition of raising Perth as a location of choice, driving increased visitation and dwell time in the city centre and supporting growth in the visitor economy as a result.”