£57m plan to redevelop convention centre axed
SENIOR Conservative councillors have confirmed that a £57m redevelopment of Harrogate Convention Centre will be scrapped.
But they offered a positive outlook for the facility’s future and heard it could operate without a £2.7m annual council subsidy in less than three years if it can attract outside investment to make smaller improvements.
North Yorkshire Council’s executive agreed that the project it inherited from the defunct Harrogate Borough Council is discontinued.
A council officer described the project as unaffordable and blamed building costs, which spiralled from £49m to £57m.
It also failed in a bid to win Levelling Up money worth £20m from the Government that would have helped to pay for the project.
The council’s executive member for finance, Coun Gareth Dadd, said it had been a “long and arduous task” to get to a decision on the redevelopment which he said would have achieved “dubious outcomes to say the least”.
The executive member for corporate services, Coun David Chance, said it would have been “ludicrous” to move forward in light of the financial predicament facing the authority.
The council is facing a £41.6m deficit in its budget this year with significant financial pressures on adult social care and special educational needs.
Coun Dadd said: “It was our job to get under the bonnet of the issues and see how the landscape has changed.”
The council will now undertake market testing to see if the venue can attract investment from the private sector or elsewhere.
Coun Dadd also proposed that the council writes to each mayoral candidate for the York and North Yorkshire Combined Authority urging them to support further investment.
He maintained the council was committed to improving the centre andsaiditwas“nottheendofthe story, far from it”.
The centre opened in 1982 with conferences and events providing a boost to the town’s bars, restaurants and hotels.
The council says the centre contributes £45m a year to the wider Harrogate district economy which Coun Dadd said “should be ignored at our peril”.
Centre director Paula Lorimer was against the redevelopment as it would have involved shutting the venue for large periods.
She backs new break-out spaces for conference delegates, which she believes could attract £1m additional income each year.
She told councillors that last year was the venue’s most successful in many years and if the upturn continues, along with a more commercial business model and investment, it could be “cost-neutral” for the council within just three years.
Ms Lorimer also suggested the venue could be renamed to reflect “a broader Yorkshire identity”. It was previously known as the Harrogate International Centre until 2017.
She said: “I’m very committed to getting investment in the centre but not at any cost, I do feel there are better ways of investing tactically, so we can do parts of the venue eachyear.”