NewsBeat

Plans emerge for huge resort with playgrounds, futuristic museum and food markets

Published

on

It is estimated it could attract 600,000 visitors a year and would employ 250 full-time staff

Plans have emerged for a huge new resort in south Wales comprising a futuristic museum, indoor playgrounds and food market, but a proposed site hasn’t been decided. It is estimated it could attract 600,000 visitors a year and would employ 250 full-time staff.

The plans seen by the Local Democracy Reporting Service and briefly discussed last week at a meeting of councillors for Torfaen County Borough Council show the visitor attraction would have four core elements.

They would include a Gallery of Marvelous Solutions to showcase exhibits currently in storage in galleries and museums across the world, a Trading Place market space offering food, locally-sourced products and workshops on repairing goods.

Advertisement

Other attractions would include a playground with a “super-sized helter-skelter, enormous maze” and “life-sized snakes and ladders” to reconnect people with their “creative problem-solving ability”.

The Tomorrow’s World exhibit would work with universities, companies and charities to showcase “groundbreaking innovations and ideas” to the public including through virtual and augmented reality technology. The entire attraction would bring science and art together and be for all ages.

Behind the plans for the site, which would be called Xanadoo, is Gaynor Coley who was one of the founders of Cornwall’s Eden Project which transformed a former clay mine into a botanical garden.

Advertisement

Ms Coley said Xanadoo would be a world class visitor destination with a major environmental and social impact and an £840 million economic impact, over 30 years, which would support more than 1,000 jobs.

One site near Pontypool is likely to have been ruled out but Ms Coley and partner Susan Hill, who also worked at the Eden Project, are currently looking at sites in Torfaen and Blaenau Gwent and also Swansea.

Their firm, Road to Happiness, which worked with Torfaen council on redesigning Greenmeadow Community Farm in Cwmbran, is in discussions with the council but Ms Coley has also urged anyone with potential sites in mind to contact it.

Advertisement

Ms Coley, who is originally from Cwmbran, said: “I’m Welsh and grew up in Cwmbran and my partner, Susan Hill, and I think Welsh tourism needs and deserves this fantastic opportunity.

“We believe Xanadoo can do the same for south Wales as the Eden Project did for Cornwall. An economic impact assessment has just been carried out and it has bought £6 billion to Cornwall and the West Country which is more than the whole of European funding and we’d like to do the same for south Wales. It will bring sustainable tourism, support hospitality and creativity, storytelling, digital and health and wellbeing.”

The grade II-listed former Nylon Spinners Factory, at Mamhilad Park in Pontypool, had been under consideration as a potential site but has likely been ruled out as the site owners intend to develop it for new housing, despite the most recently approved plans having been overturned following a judicial review.

Advertisement

Ms Coley said she and her partners are “still open-minded” on potential sites and are “actively looking for sites” in Swansea, Torfaen and Blaenau Gwent. The two Gwent councils have a formal partnership in which they work together.

She said: “I would encourage anybody who thinks there is a location that could be right for Xanadoo to get in touch.”

A prospectus for the project lists Torfaen Borough Council and the UK Government under those that have further developed and contributed to the feasibility study which cites figures based on research from 2023 and a projected opening in 2028.

As well as a visitor attraction Xanadoo would have space for businesses and universities to work together.

Xanadoo is also highlighted in a report on a proposed Torfaen destination management plan intended to guide the development of a visitor and tourism economy in the borough.

The report reads: “A potential major visitor attraction development such as Xanadoo could help to transform the area”. It adds: “Xanadoo would be a major draw for Torfaen and south Wales.”

When the tourism plan was discussed by Torfaen councillors Reform UK member for Llantarnam, Alan Slade, asked what Xanadoo is.

Advertisement

Council deputy chief executive Dave Leech said he couldn’t go into details “as they are commercially sensitive” but described it as a “potential tourism product” in “very, very early stages” with sites in the borough being looked at. Make sure you never miss Wales’ biggest updates by getting our daily newsletter.

Source link

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

Cancel reply

Trending

Exit mobile version