£22 million boost for Canterbury city centre

Canterbury will benefit from £22 million in investment that will reboot its position as a global heritage destination and transform the city centre.

On Wednesday 18 January, the government announced it was awarding the Connected Canterbury: Unlocking The Tales Of England project £19,905,911 with the remainder being made up of match funding from the city council.

The project is designed to make the most of the city’s history and heritage, revitalise its public spaces and build on the past to bring even more success in the future. It includes:

Cllr Ben Fitter-Harding, Leader of Canterbury City Council, said: “I am absolutely overjoyed that our Levelling Up Fund bid enabling Canterbury’s Tales of England, the ambitious plan to reboot Canterbury as a global heritage destination, has been fully funded by the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities (DLUHC).

“We can now begin the hard work of executing our vision to deliver significant improvements to the city of Canterbury that will benefit residents, businesses and visitors alike, safeguarding our wonderful heritage and telling the Tales of England for decades to come.

“Our interventions at Canterbury Castle, the Westgate, the bus station, the city walls, Dane John Gardens and our routes, parks and open spaces will leave a legacy for our children and our children’s children to enjoy and be inspired by.

“This is a project that will benefit the whole district because it will entice even more people to visit or stay overnight in Canterbury, Herne Bay and Whitstable which benefits our economy and creates jobs.”

While officers from Canterbury City Council put in an incredible amount of work to pull the bid together and submitted it to DLUHC, Cllr Fitter-Harding made it clear today’s success is the result of a huge team effort across the city.

He said: “As Chair of Canterbury’s Tales of England Board, which includes vital stakeholders from across the city, I will be working closely with them to ensure that this success is the beginning of a period of significant public and private investment to deliver the wider ambitions of the project.

However, the bid for £13m from the Levelling Up Fund to revitalise Herne Bay by rejuvenating the King’s Hall and the Bandstand, improving the area around the Clock Tower and better connecting the seafront to the town centre was not successful this time around.

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