The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

A deep dive in the impressive ‘pool

Enjoying a day in the life of Liverpool, Alan Richardson discovers what Dundee could aim towards

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An industrial city, grown from a thriving waterfront and left to rot as heavy industry ceased, rising from the ashes thanks to a cultural renaissanc­e on those very river

banks.

It may sound familiar but this is Liverpool, not Dundee, although it offers an enticing vision of the revolution our proud city could enjoy.

Where Dundee is known the world over for the three Js, Liverpool is infused with the spirit of the Fab Four and as my weekend visit to Liverpool was an unashamed tourist trip, I immersed myself in the full Beatles experience.

We based ourselves in the heart of the action – Royal Albert Dock, a former loading area for goods from across the world, beautifull­y made to come together as boutique shops, galleries, museums, bars and restaurant­s.

There sits the award-winning Beatles Story, an immersive and interactiv­e museum and exhibition which walks visitors through the story of the world’s biggest band, from their humble origins as The Quarrymen, through Beatlemani­a and psychedeli­a to bitter and tragic endings.

Not just for enthusiast­s, there is something for everyone in the many galleries. They are well worth a repeat visit if time permits – there is no way everything can be taken in at once.

Having been through a recreation of the famous Cavern Club, the real thing is a short walk away in the bustling centre so the obvious thing is to pay it a visit.

There is a small entry fee but it was worth it to wind downstairs into a piece of living history.

The heavily-graffiti-ed walls (we left our own mark) and low ceilings were said to drip with sweat as fans packed in to see their local heroes before they hit the big time. Thankfully the environs were less moist but still redolent with history.

A live music programme is laid on most times. Naturally, the music has

thecourier­magazine a heavy Liverpool scene influence, but what else could you want?

We could have stayed all day but had to let it be and, with libations enjoyed and a veritable greatest hits ringing in our ears, we emerged, blinking, into the sunlight to explore the rest of the centre.

If shopping’s your thing, it has the lot with the impressive open-air Liverpool ONE shopping centre and surroundin­g streets showing that when the offering is right, the high street can thrive.

We made our way back to the

Liverpool ONE shopping centre and surroundin­g streets show that when the offering is right, the high street can thrive

waterfront area for that other Merseybeat staple, a ferry across the Mersey.

A £30 family ticket to ride buys a 50-minute-round, hop-on, hop-off trip that includes a stop at the U534 U-boat story exhibition.

No yellow submarine this, but a German U-boat scuttled in the dying days of the war, recovered from the seabed and brought to Liverpool for display.

As well as an exhibition telling the story of the vessel and its demise, the sub has been split into sections for an access-all-areas view which captures the claustroph­obic hell of underwater warfare.

Liverpool is proud of its naval heritage and no more so than its dazzle ships: the wartime practice of painting ships in bright colours and wild designs to confuse enemy perception­s of distance and speed.

The Mersey ferry is painted in tribute and there is another in dry dock, adding a further splash of colour to the area.

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