London tourist sights suffer after Paris attacks

Britain's exit from the EU is expected to take at least two years.

Britain's exit from the EU is expected to take at least two years.

Published Mar 8, 2016

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London - Major tourist attractions in London and the South-east suffered last year in the wake of the terrorist attacks in Paris and the travel chaos caused by the Calais crisis.

Many popular museums including The National Gallery, Natural History Museum, Southbank Centre, Tate Modern, the Science Museum and the Tower of London experienced a decline in numbers in 2015, according to new figures from the Association of Leading Visitor Attractions (Alva).

Anecdotal evidence suggests many would-be tourists were put off visiting the capital in the aftermath of November's Isis attacks on entertainment venues in Paris.

Attractions in Kent also suffered as a result of the disruption caused by a combination of strikes by French port workers and attempts by migrants to reach the UK from Calais. Police were forced to convert stretches of the M20 into a near-permanent lorry park in an attempt to mitigate the chaos, which put off day-trippers to the county.

Bernard Donoghue, director of Alva, said: “Our members told us that the poor weather had an effect, and our members in the South-east did see a decrease during Operation Stack in Kent as well as following the Paris attacks.”

Overall, visits to London attractions increased by 1.6 percent from 2014 - a significantly smaller rise than in other regions of the UK.

Last year there were 124.4 million visits to top sites across the UK, up 3.2 percent since 2014. A total of 65.2 million visits were made to London attractions. Of these the British Museum was most popular, and a two percent increase to 6.8 million visitors meant it was the top site in the UK for the ninth year in a row.

In second place was The National Gallery with 5.9 million visitors, attracted by exhibitions such Goya: The Portraits. But the numbers were down eight percent after it was hit by closures following a number of strikes by employees.

Mr Donoghue said: “More people visited the British Museum and the National Gallery, combined, than visited Barcelona.”

Tate Modern visits dropped almost a fifth to 4.7 million, as the gallery failed to match the success of its 2014 Henri Matisse exhibit. A spokeswoman said the gallery remained “the world's most popular gallery of modern and contemporary art”, attracting on average between 4.5 million and 5 million visitors a year.

Scottish attractions rose 5.5 percent and Edinburgh Castle, the most popular, had 1.6 million visitors. The most popular attraction outside London was the Library of Birmingham in 11th place with 1.8 million visitors. Chester Zoo, which saw an 18 percent increase to 1.7 million visitors, was the most visited paid-for attraction in England outside London.

There was a 3.5 percent increase in visits to gardens, and it was a record year for the Royal Horticultural Society, with an increase of 6.1 per cent to more than 1 million visitors to RHS Garden Wisley.

 

The Independent

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