The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Calls for council to seek youngsters’ masterplan views

- ALASTAIR GOSSIP

Several thousand Aberdonian­s have made their voices heard with a £150 million refresh of the Granite City on the line.

More than 8,000 people took part in an online consultati­on which could shape the future of Union Street, the city centre and beach, and surroundin­g areas.

But now, community leaders have levelled criticism at the public poll for being too complicate­d – with calls for more to be done to involve Aberdeen youngsters in decisionma­king around the plan.

To gauge how important potential city improvemen­ts were to the public – and where they should be made – the council launched a points-based consultati­on, where voters could weight the projects which mattered most to them.

First drawn up in 2015, the city centre masterplan (CCMP) – now expanded to take in the seafront too – is described by council chiefs as a “living document”.

But unlike the initial plan, before the pandemic made access to schools more challengin­g and there was substantia­l consultati­on of the city’s future adults, this year the council has been accused of doing little to sound them out.

Aberdeen City Centre Community Council chairman, Dustin Macdonald, claims it is an opportunit­y missed.

At a meeting this week, he said: “Schools have just finished and the number of emails parents and children get about lots of random things, there could have been something put out for children to have a say.

“There could have been something done to give them a voice – and there wasn’t.

“I would be happy if there was a young person friendly version that I could show my children.

“I couldn’t do it with that one. If I sat that points simulator system in front of my kids they would look at me like I’m daft.”

With the high street turmoil caused by the rise of internet shopping, the pandemic and the northeast’s unique economic climate based on the energy industry; now has been deemed the right time for a first “refresh” of the blueprint.

A £150m war chest has been put aside by the local authority to fund the transforma­tion, which could include a new market developmen­t in the former BHS building, pedestrian­isation of Union Street out in front of it, and improved walking and cycling links with the beach.

At the waterfront, there is the prospect of a new football stadium to keep the Dons within kicking distance of the city centre, renovation­s to the Beach Ballroom and a replacemen­t Beach Leisure Centre.

Council leader Jenny Laing, at the meeting with Mr Macdonald, said: “To be fair to our school staff, the upturn in Covid cases in the city has significan­tly impacted our schools and a lot of our teams have had to deal with that in the run up to the holidays.

“In secondarie­s, they have also had to deal with assessment­s as there were no exams.”

She added: “In the last masterplan, there was a great deal of consultati­on with young people in schools, but because of the situation we are having to do things virtually and trying to get the consultati­on to as many groups as possible.

“We are trying to get Unesco child friendly status so it makes absolute sense that children help shape up those plans.

“This is a sort of stepping out on this process again but we are not rewriting the masterplan, we are just asking if the projects within it are still pertinent.

“But we have been doing work in our schools around some of these things.”

City centre masterplan lead at the council, Marie Boulton, said: “I have been encouraged by the thousands who have engaged in the consultati­on process and I continue to be eager to hear what the public think should be our priorities.”

 ??  ?? VISION: The format of the online consultati­on on the masterplan, including the seafront, was too complex for children.
VISION: The format of the online consultati­on on the masterplan, including the seafront, was too complex for children.

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