Fáilte Ireland and Údarás na Gaeltachta have announced funding of over €4m to support two major tourism development projects on the Aran island of Inis Mór and Cléire or Cape Clear island in West Cork.
Údarás na Gaeltachta is working with island community cooperatives Comharchumann Forbartha Árann Teo in Co Galway and Comharchumann Chléire Teo in Co Cork on the initiatives.
Fáilte Ireland says the projects aim to “enhance both the community fabric of the Islands, while also improving the visitor experience, extending the islands’ tourism season, and providing significant economic and cultural benefits to the local communities”.
The capital investment is part of a strategic partnership between Fáilte Ireland and Údarás na Gaeltachta which aims to “make Gaeltacht experiences appealing, accessible and relevant to visitors”.
Capital investment funding totalling over €3 million has been allocated to the Árainn – Place of Stone Visitor Centre, which will be located in the former Aran islands heritage centre in Cill Rónáin, Inis Mór, Co Galway.
“This project will create an immersive visitor attraction that celebrates the rich Irish language and cultural heritage of the island,”Fáilte Ireland says.
“The Place of Stone Visitor Centre will also deliver vital infrastructure such as a café, visitor orientation area and changing facilities which will help increase both visitor spend and dwell time from existing visitors and an overall extension of the traditional tourism season on the island,”it says.
“The centre is also expected to become a cultural hub for both locals and tourists alike, offering year-round programming and events that reflect the vibrancy of the island community,”it says.
The Cape Clear Fastnet Experience and Heritage Centre has been allocated over €1million in capital investment funding to significantly upgrade and develop the current visitor attraction, “creating a new innovative visitor attraction that will offer augmented reality and 3D experiences centred around Fastnet lighthouse,”Fáilte Ireland says.
“ Additionally, the project involves relocating and interpreting the existing collection of heritage artefacts from the existing Cape Clear museum to tell the story of the island’s ancient past, as well as its maritime heritage,”it says.
Fáilte Ireland says estimates that the projects combined will drive almost €50million in visitor spend for the regions over next 10 years.”
Tomás Ó Siocháin, CEO of Údarás na Gaeltachta, said the projects “embody our commitment to balancing tourism development with community needs, ensuring that our islands remain vibrant, living Gaeltacht areas for generations to come”.