https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cwy7zlpww76o

National Trust blocks Mourne gondola project on proposed land

Jake Wood

BBC News NI

Published

40 minutes ago

The National Trust have said they will not lease land it manages in the Mourne Mountains for the development of a cable car up Slieve Donard, Northern Ireland's highest mountain.

The proposed £44m project would have involved the development of a 1km cable car structure from Donard Park up to a disused quarry.

But the National Trust have said the project should not go ahead in light of the "fragile and threatened" state of the Mourne landscape.

In a statement, they said their responsibility is to "restore nature in the Mournes, whilst balancing safe and sustainable access for people".

Last month, there were almost 150 wildfires causing a devastating impact on habitats in the mountain range.

'Never endorsed the project'

The National Trust is responsible for the land in the Eastern Mournes Special Area of Conservation including Slieve Donard and Thomas Quarry – the site earmarked for the proposed gondola station and visitor centre.

In a statement on Thursday, the Trust confirmed that the proposed project would "risk placing additional pressures on already degraded upland habitats".

It would therefore "not be considering a lease at Thomas Quarry".

It said that it has engaged with Newry, Mourne and Down District Council on the projects proposals but have "consistently expressed our serious concerns" as far back as eight years ago and "encouraged other options to be considered".

"We have never endorsed the project and have not been a partner in its development," it added.

It was estimated that the scheme would about 350,000 annual visitors

The Trust said their concerns about the upland habitats not being in a "favourable condition" are shared by local people.

Last year, a petition of about 6,000 signatures opposing the Newcastle project was presented to the Stormont Assembly.

It was allocated £30m of funding from the Belfast Region City Deal.

Those behind the petition said they have environmental and economic concerns about the viability of the scheme that hopes to attract about 350,000 annual visitors.

There was also a number businesspeople who supported the project as they believed it would help create a year-round tourist economy for the region.

Reconsideration welcomed

Alliance South Down MLA Andrew McMurray and Mournes Cllr Jill Truesdale have welcomed the announcement from the National Trust.

Mr McMurray has said: "Given the hugely significant environmental issues associated with the project, especially in light of the damage done by recent fires, as well the serious concerns around economic viability, this move from the National Trust is incredibly welcome."

Ms Truesdale added that "this reconsideration has been a long time coming" and that "there are many valid reasons people here oppose different aspects of the gondola project".

by con_zilla

16 comments
  1. would have thought the project would have got the National Trust onside beforehand ?

    dunno how it all works

  2. Good, it’s a fuckin awful idea

    We could have better transport to the mournes but they suggest a fuckin monorail up a hill 

  3. Good – in this day and age environmental concerns should be prioritised.

  4. Ugly carbuncle and it wasn’t aimed at locals. Doubt it would have run that often. Who asked for it anyway?

  5. Seriously if they just built some parking up there and redone the road up to it and built a tiny visitor centre it woulda been sweet. But no we had to spend millions on something that the natural trust never said they would do lol.

  6. It’s just a pity the same resistance wasn’t shown years ago when private quarry owners where allowed to blast the hell out of the mountains and leave ugly scares for all to see, nobody mentions that.

  7. Good it was a stupid idea. Who needs a cable car to go up Donard. It’s hardly the Matterhorn

  8. Good. Generally not a fan of the English National Trust having control of sites here (Scotland has their own, so should we), but they’re absolutely right to block this shite.

  9. Something seriously shady was going on with this project. Nobody wanted it but some councillors were trying to push it through for years. Glad to see it’s finally died

  10. If they want more visitors to the Mournes, fire some more useful busses on from Belfast. Would be a hell of a lot cheaper than this nonsense.

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