Waterloo Region Record

Fury cross the Mersey: Liverpool loses world heritage status

- JILL LAWLESS

Civic leaders in Liverpool expressed outrage Wednesday after the English port city was stripped of its World Heritage status by the United Nations’ culture organizati­on.

UNESCO’s World Heritage Committee voted in a secret ballot to remove the designatio­n because of developmen­ts in the city centre and on its historic River Mersey waterfront. The committee said the projects, including a planned new stadium for soccer team Everton, were “detrimenta­l to the site’s authentici­ty and integrity” and had caused “irreversib­le loss of attributes.”

Liverpool Mayor Joanne Anderson called the decision “incomprehe­nsible.”

“I’m hugely disappoint­ed and concerned by this decision to delete Liverpool’s World Heritage status, which comes a decade after UNESCO last visited the city to see it with their own eyes,” she said.

Anderson said the city would explore whether it could appeal, “but, whatever happens, Liverpool will always be a World Heritage city. We have a stunning waterfront and incredible built heritage that is the envy of other cities.”

Liverpool was one of the world’s busiest ports in the 18th and 19th centuries, growing prosperous from trade in goods and — until the trade in humans was outlawed by Britain in 1807 — slaves. The docks declined and became derelict in the 20th century, but have been restored with museums, shops, bars, restaurant­s and new housing developmen­ts, making Liverpool a symbol of urban renewal.

The city that gave birth to The Beatles was added to UNESCO’s World Heritage list in 2004, joining sites including India’s Taj Mahal, Egypt’s pyramids and the Tower of London.

But it was placed on the organizati­on’s heritage in danger list in 2012 amid concerns that modern developmen­t was marring the docklands’ character.

The World Heritage Committee, made up of representa­tives from 21 countries, was asked to decide Liverpool’s fate after an experts’ report said “inadequate governance processes, mechanisms, and regulation­s for new developmen­ts in and around the World Heritage property” resulted in “serious deteriorat­ion and irreversib­le loss of attributes.”

Steve Rotheram, mayor of the wider Liverpool region, said the decision was “a retrograde step that does not reflect the reality of what is happening on the ground.”

 ?? PETER BYRNE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? An aerial view of Bramley Moore Dock on Liverpool waterfront, which has been removed from the UN’s World Heritage List.
PETER BYRNE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS An aerial view of Bramley Moore Dock on Liverpool waterfront, which has been removed from the UN’s World Heritage List.

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