The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

V&A hit by ‘Dundonian short-sightednes­s’

-

Sir, – I am baffled by Angus Tourism Co-operative’s statement that visitor numbers and money spent were not the only way to measure tourism (V&A wider tourism lift fails to endure, Courier, June 29).

The only other impacts that spring to mind are social and environmen­tal, which are so often negative.

This does not sound like a pro-active response from the sector. I am less perplexed by the claim the “V&A effect” has not been sustained.

As an occasional visitor to the region in which I grew up, there are many things I love to visit, but the much-vaunted V&A is frankly more café than gallery.

Even on opening, the curators lacked confidence: the Ocean Liners exhibition was second-hand from London, which at the same time had Videogames as its exhibit, an industry in which Dundee has some renown.

The building itself was

nationwide that have sacrificed so, so much, with only very little support from the government!

She forgets to thank all the home-carers that went to private homes to care for people, taking huge risks, with only very little support from the government.

And she forgets to thank the people that cared – and continue to care for – their loved ones at home, keeping them safe and protected.

These people don’t get a compromise, pushed inland, and ill-planned roadways divorced the city centre even further from its waterfront.

The site was blighted by offices void of architectu­ral merit and occupants, built in a fit of Dundonian shortsight­edness.

Mike Galloway claimed in 2017 that the lack of office space impeded the local economy, and councillor­s could o nly claim the uproar showed how much local people cared for the

paid for their ‘job’, they do it out of pure love.

Don’t they deserve a thank you? It is not only NHS workers that were faced with adversity.

All workers from all levels throughout the whole of Scotland were faced with adversity, one way or the other.

Mrs Maaike Cook. Cash Feus, Strathmigl­o.

V&A building. But even before Covid-19, it was clear that offices were not the future of work – and these should have not featured in the waterfront masterplan.

The legacy of this project should have been vast for the wider region: instead it has been an opportunit­y squandered.

The Eden Project should look well outside the city limits for a location.

Jamie Potton.

14 Lind Street, Ryde.

suggests the Covid virus is mutating into a weaker strain.

The positive is that, despite fresh cases arising ,the numbers requiring hospitalis­ation is falling together with deaths, which are now at a level lower than that of a normal Winter Flu outbreak.

In Fife we have gone a week without any new Covid cases yet the government have decided to increase rather than relax restrictio­ns. Why?

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom