Ancient East Tourism & Cross-Border Connectivity Strategy

The Missing Link in Ireland’s Premier Coastal Route
🎯 Key Strategic Revelations
1. The Two-Bridge Strategy
- Narrow Water Bridge (planned, funded and build completion late 2027): Connects Warrenpoint (NI) to Omeath (ROI)
- Strangford Bridge (proposed): Completes the A2 coastal route
- Together: Create unbroken Belfast-to-Dublin coastal drive (300km)
2. The Ferry Bottleneck
Current Strangford-Portaferry ferry:
- Capacity: Only ~15 cars per sailing
- Hours: ~7:30am-10:30pm (limited)
- Frequency: Every 30 minutes
- Annual capacity: ~200,000 vehicles (constrained)
- Tourist impact: Major psychological barrier, tour operators avoid route
3. Tourism Economic Opportunity
- Ireland’s Ancient East: €1B+ brand, 2.5M+ visitors
- Natural NI extension: Titanic → GoT → St. Patrick → Mournes
- Additional tourism spending: £15-30M annually at maturity
- Tourism jobs: 170-280 created
- Comparable to: North Coast 500 (Scotland), Pacific Coast Highway
4. Funding Synergies
Perfect alignment for multi-source funding:
- Shared Island Fund (Irish Gov): Cross-border connectivity
- UK Levelling Up Fund: Regional development
- EU PEACE+ Programme: Cross-border cooperation
- Tourism agencies: Route development & marketing
- Precedent: Narrow Water already supported by Shared Island Fund
5. Political Momentum
- Both governments committed to cross-border tourism
- Narrow Water sets precedent
- Ancient East brand seeking northern extension
- Post-COVID tourism recovery investment phase
- Perfect timing
Total economic benefit: £36-68M annually (freight + tourism)
🎯 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
The Strangford Lough Crossing is the critical missing link in a transformational Belfast-to-Dublin coastal tourism route. Combined with the planned Narrow Water Bridge, it would create an unbroken 300km+ coastal heritage drive connecting:
- Ireland’s Ancient East tourism brand (2.5M+ annual visitors, €1B+ value)
- Northern Ireland’s heritage & coastal assets (Titanic, GoT, Mournes, fishing ports)
- Three major fishing ports (Ardglass, Portavogie, Kilkeel)
- Cross-border economic corridor (Belfast-Newry-Dundalk-Dublin)
The current Strangford ferry (~15 cars, 30-min frequency, limited hours) is a major bottleneck preventing this world-class tourism product from being realized.
🗺️ IRELAND’S ANCIENT EAST CONTEXT
The Tourism Brand
Launched: 2016 by Fáilte Ireland (Irish tourism authority)
Geography: East coast from Newgrange (Boyne Valley) to Kinsale (Cork)
Theme: 5,000 years of history—ancient monuments, medieval heritage, Viking sites
Target markets: North American, European, domestic Irish/UK
Performance: 2.5+ million annual visitors, €1+ billion economic value
Brand Proposition
“Ireland’s Ancient East: Where stories were born”
Key attractions:
- Newgrange (older than Pyramids)
- Boyne Valley battlefields
- Viking settlements (Waterford, Wexford)
- Medieval castles and abbeys
- Monastic sites (Glendalough, etc.)
- Coastal scenery and fishing heritage
Northern Ireland Natural Extension
Northern Ireland sites fit perfectly:
- Strangford Lough: Viking heritage, medieval castles, St. Patrick connections
- Down Cathedral: St. Patrick’s burial site (claimed)
- Nendrum Monastery: Early Christian settlement
- Ards Peninsula: Monastic sites, coastal beauty
- Mourne Mountains: Legendary landscape, CS Lewis inspiration
- Newry/Carlingford: Border heritage, mountain scenery
- Belfast: Titanic, industrial heritage, Game of Thrones
Problem: Infrastructure gap prevents seamless tourism circuit integration.
🌉 THE TWO BRIDGES STRATEGY
Narrow Water Bridge (Opening late 2027)
Location: Carlingford Lough, connecting Omeath (ROI) to Warrenpoint (NI)
Length: ~280m bridge span
Status: Planning approved, funding pending
Expected cost: €100-125 million
Significance: First new cross-border bridge in decades
Benefits:
- Direct Newry-Dundalk link (currently 45km detour via Newry-Dundalk road)
- Completes Mourne coastal route
- Cross-border economic corridor
- Tourism circuit (Carlingford-Mourne-Slieve Gullion)
- Strong political support from both governments
Funders committed:
- Irish Government (Shared Island Fund)
- UK Government (NI Executive)
- EU (PEACE+ Programme consideration)
Strangford Lough Bridge (Proposed)
Location: Strangford Lough narrows, Portaferry to Strangford
Length: ~1.5-2.5km (depending on exact route)
Status: Feasibility stage, campaign active
Expected cost: £300-350 million
Significance: Completes A2 coastal route, ends ferry bottleneck
Benefits:
- Connects Ards Peninsula to Lecale Peninsula 24/7
- Enables Belfast-Dublin coastal drive
- Unlocks eastern Ards economic potential
- Three-port fishing logistics (Ardglass-Portavogie-Kilkeel)
- Complements Narrow Water Bridge perfectly
🚗 THE BROKEN A2 COASTAL ROUTE
Current Situation
Belfast to Dublin Coastal Route (A2/N1/N52):
Belfast (Titanic Quarter)
↓ A2 - 30km
Bangor (seaside resort, marina)
↓ A2 - 15km
Donaghadee (ferry heritage)
↓ A2 - 12km
Portavogie (fishing port)
↓ A20 - 15km
Portaferry
↓↓↓ **[FERRY BOTTLENECK - 20 min crossing]** ↓↓↓
Strangford
↓ A25 - 15km
Downpatrick (St. Patrick heritage)
↓ A2 - 25km
Newcastle (Mourne gateway, beach resort)
↓ A2 - 20km
Kilkeel (fishing port, Mournes)
↓ A2 - 15km
Warrenpoint
↓↓↓ **[NARROW WATER BRIDGE - opening late 2027]** ↓↓↓
Omeath (ROI)
↓ R173 - 10km
Carlingford (medieval village, mountains)
↓ R173/N1 - 20km
Dundalk
↓ N1 - 40km
Drogheda
↓ N1 - 10km
Boyne Valley (Newgrange, Battle of the Boyne)
↓ N1/M1 - 50km
DUBLINTotal distance: ~300km Belfast to Dublin
Journey time:
- Current: 5-7 hours (with ferry waits, uncertainties)
- With both bridges: 3.5-4.5 hours continuous driving
The Ferry Bottleneck
Strangford-Portaferry Ferry:
- Capacity: ~15 cars per sailing
- Frequency: Every 30 minutes (peak), every hour (off-peak)
- Operating hours: ~7:30am-10:30pm (shorter winter hours)
- Cost: £7-8 per car return (2024 prices)
- Crossing time: 8-10 minutes
- Annual capacity: ~200,000 vehicles (estimated)
- Weather disruptions: Frequent in winter
Tourist Impact:
- Waiting times: 30-90 minutes in peak summer
- Uncertainty: “Will I make the ferry?”
- Planning difficulties: Tour operators avoid route
- Psychological barrier: International tourists intimidated
- Continuity break: Ruins “seamless drive” experience
- Hours limitation: Can’t do evening/early morning journeys
🎯 THE TRANSFORMED TOURISM PRODUCT
With Both Bridges: “The Ancient East Coastal Drive”
Brand proposition:
“Belfast to Dublin: 300km of history, heritage, and stunning scenery—unbroken coastal experience”
Route Highlights (North to South)
BELFAST GATEWAY (km 0-30)
- Titanic Quarter & museum
- Game of Thrones filming locations
- Belfast-Bangor coastal path
- Traffic data (2018): A2 Cultra 35,970/day, tourist-heavy
ARDS PENINSULA (km 30-60)
- Donaghadee lighthouse & harbour
- Portavogie fishing port (working harbour)
- Exploris aquarium
- [STRANGFORD BRIDGE – seamless crossing]
- Traffic data (2018): A20 7,500/day (suppressed by ferry)
LECALE & ST. PATRICK COUNTRY (km 60-100)
- Strangford Lough (National Nature Reserve, seals)
- Castle Ward (Game of Thrones Winterfell)
- Downpatrick (St. Patrick Centre, Down Cathedral)
- Inch Abbey ruins
- Traffic data (2018): A25 ~8,000-10,000/day
MOURNE MOUNTAINS & COAST (km 100-150)
- Newcastle beach & promenade
- Mourne Wall (22-mile granite wall)
- Slieve Donard (highest peak)
- Silent Valley reservoir
- Kilkeel fishing port
- Traffic data (2018): A2 varies 8,000-15,000/day
CARLINGFORD & BORDER REGION (km 150-180)
- Warrenpoint
- [NARROW WATER BRIDGE – cross-border link]
- Carlingford village (medieval)
- Slieve Gullion Forest Park
- Cross-border scenic route
BOYNE VALLEY & ANCIENT IRELAND (km 180-250)
- Dundalk
- Drogheda (medieval town)
- Newgrange (5,000-year-old passage tomb)
- Hill of Tara
- Battle of the Boyne site
DUBLIN DESTINATION (km 250-300)
- Ireland’s capital
- International gateway
Marketing Themes
“Five Thousand Years in 300 Kilometers”
- Neolithic monuments to Titanic
- Vikings to Game of Thrones
- St. Patrick to modern Ireland
“Three Countries, One Journey” (historical)
- Kingdom of Ulster
- Pale of Dublin
- Ancient tribal kingdoms
“Working Coast, Living Heritage”
- Three active fishing ports
- Traditional farming
- Coastal communities
- Sustainable food (seafood trail)
💰 TOURISM ECONOMIC ANALYSIS
Current Ferry Constraint Impact
Strangford Ferry statistics (estimated):
- Annual crossings: ~200,000 vehicles
- Tourist vehicles: 40-50% = 80,000-100,000 annually
- Summer peak: 600-800 vehicles/day
- Winter low: 200-300 vehicles/day
Suppressed demand:
- Tour operators avoid route due to ferry unpredictability
- Motorhome/caravan tourists deterred (booking uncertainty)
- International tourists intimidated (unfamiliar with ferry)
- Evening/night travel impossible (ferry hours)
- Coach tours avoid (can’t guarantee schedule)
Estimated “lost” tourism:
- Potential additional tourists if no ferry: 50,000-100,000 vehicles/year
- At 2.5 people/vehicle, £100/person/day: £12.5-25M lost annually
With Strangford Bridge: Tourism Growth Projection
Year 1 (Opening):
- Current ferry traffic: 200,000 vehicles
- “Unlocked” tourist traffic: +20-30% = +40,000-60,000 vehicles
- Total bridge tourist traffic: 240,000-260,000 vehicles
- Additional tourist spending: £8-12M
Year 5 (Established Route):
- Route reputation builds
- Tour operator inclusion
- International marketing
- Total tourist traffic: 300,000-350,000 vehicles
- Additional spending vs baseline: £15-20M
Year 10 (Mature Product):
- Established as iconic drive (like NC500 Scotland)
- International bucket-list status
- Total tourist traffic: 400,000-500,000 vehicles
- Additional spending: £20-30M annually
Employment Impact
Tourism sector jobs created:
- Accommodation: 50-80 jobs
- Food & beverage: 60-100 jobs
- Activities/attractions: 30-50 jobs
- Retail: 20-30 jobs
- Tour operations: 10-20 jobs
- Total: 170-280 jobs
Business investment:
- Hotels/B&Bs expansion
- Restaurant development
- Activity centers (kayaking, cycling, hiking)
- Heritage interpretation
- Artisan food/craft producers
🤝 CROSS-BORDER POLICY ALIGNMENT
Shared Strategic Objectives
Both Governments Committed To:
✅ Tourism development
- Ireland’s Ancient East (Fáilte Ireland)
- NI tourism strategy (Tourism NI)
- Tourism Ireland international marketing
✅ Cross-border cooperation
- Good Friday Agreement legacy
- North-South Ministerial Council
- Shared Island initiative (Irish Gov)
✅ Regional economic development
- Levelling Up (UK)
- National Planning Framework (Ireland)
- EU PEACE+ Programme
✅ Climate action
- Sustainable tourism vs air travel
- Active travel (cycling, walking routes)
- Public transport corridors
✅ Heritage & culture
- Shared heritage narratives
- Cultural tourism development
- Community connections
Funding Opportunities
EU PEACE+ Programme (2021-2027)
- Budget: €1 billion
- Theme 1: Building peaceful & thriving communities
- Theme 2: Delivering economic regeneration & transformation
- Cross-border infrastructure explicitly supported
- Precedent: Narrow Water Bridge consideration
Irish Shared Island Fund
- Budget: €2 billion (2021-2030)
- Infrastructure & connectivity priority
- NI projects welcomed
- Already supports: Narrow Water Bridge
- Strong precedent for Strangford Bridge
UK Levelling Up Fund
- Round 4 expected
- Transport infrastructure eligible
- Tourism & culture priorities
- NI regions encouraged to apply
INTERREG
- EU cross-border cooperation
- Ireland-Northern Ireland-Scotland programme
- Tourism & transport projects
- Joint applications (both governments)
Tourism Ireland
- International marketing
- Could brand complete route
- Leverage both bridges for global campaigns
📊 TRAFFIC & DEMAND MODELING
Current Traffic Patterns (2018 Baseline)
A2 Belfast-Bangor corridor:
- CP 502 (Cultra): 35,970 vehicles/day
- Strong tourist/leisure component
- Summer peaks significantly higher
- Base for northern section demand
Ards Peninsula:
- CP 510 (Donaghadee area): 4,900 vehicles/day
- CP 444 (A20 Kircubbin): 7,500 vehicles/day
- Suppressed by ferry constraint
Ferry traffic:
- ~200,000 vehicles/year = ~550 vehicles/day average
- Only 7% of A20 traffic (7,500/day) uses ferry
- Indicates massive suppression of through-traffic
Mourne Coast:
- A2 Newcastle-Kilkeel: 8,000-15,000 vehicles/day
- High summer tourist peaks
- Winter much lower (local traffic)
Bridge Demand Projection
Component 1: Current ferry traffic
- Base: 200,000 vehicles/year
Component 2: Unlocked A20 traffic
- Currently avoiding area due to ferry: +30-40%
- Bridge contribution: +60,000-80,000 vehicles/year
Component 3: New tourist traffic
- International marketing of complete route
- Tour operator inclusion
- Motorhome/caravan market
- Bridge contribution: +50,000-100,000 vehicles/year
Component 4: Freight optimization
- Three-port fishing logistics
- Agricultural efficiency
- Food distribution
- Bridge contribution: +50,000-80,000 vehicles/year (see freight analysis)
Total Projected Bridge Traffic:
- Year 1: 400,000-500,000 crossings
- Year 5: 600,000-800,000 crossings
- Year 10: 800,000-1,200,000 crossings
Tourism percentage: 40-50% of total traffic
🌍 INTERNATIONAL COMPARATOR ROUTES
Wild Atlantic Way (Ireland)
Metrics:
- Length: 2,500km
- Launched: 2014
- Annual visitors: 2.5+ million
- Economic value: €300M+ direct, €2B+ indirect
- International recognition: Top 10 global coastal drives
Success factors:
- Consistent branding & wayfinding
- Investment in viewing points, trails
- International marketing (Tourism Ireland)
- Unbroken route (no ferries blocking flow)
Lesson: Infrastructure continuity essential for tourism success
North Coast 500 (Scotland)
Metrics:
- Length: 830km
- Launched: 2015
- Annual visitors: 200,000+
- Economic impact: £30M+ annually
- Route start/end: Inverness Castle
Success factors:
- Clear circular route
- Heritage & scenery combination
- No major bottlenecks
- Strong digital/social media presence
Lesson: New routes can rapidly gain international traction with right infrastructure
Pacific Coast Highway (California, USA)
Metrics:
- Length: 1,055km (San Francisco to San Diego)
- Annual visitors: Millions
- Iconic global brand
- Major economic driver for coastal communities
Success factors:
- Stunning continuous scenery
- Multiple attractions along route
- Reliability (no ferries, year-round access)
- International marketing
Lesson: Coastal drives become bucket-list experiences with seamless connectivity
Celtic Coastal Drive Potential
Competitive position:
- Length: 300km (manageable 1-3 day trip)
- Density of attractions: Very high (heritage, scenery, food, activities)
- International appeal: Titanic + GoT + Ancient history + Coastal beauty
- Accessibility: Between two capital cities (Belfast, Dublin)
- Uniqueness: Cross-border heritage narrative
- Challenge: Currently broken by ferry
With both bridges:
- Comparable to NC500 for length & appeal
- More accessible than Wild Atlantic Way (shorter)
- Unique cross-border/heritage story
- Could attract 150,000-300,000 dedicated route tourists/year
🎨 MARKETING & BRANDING STRATEGY
Brand Development
Working title: “The Celtic Coastal Drive” or “The Ancient East”
Tagline options:
- “Belfast to Dublin: Where legends meet the sea”
- “5,000 years of stories, 300km of beauty”
- “From Titanic to Newgrange: Ireland’s Epic Coast”
Visual identity:
- Coastal scenery (Mournes, Strangford Lough)
- Heritage sites (castles, monuments)
- Working harbours (fishing boats)
- Food/culture (seafood, crafts)
- Active tourism (hiking, cycling)
Target Markets
Primary international:
- North America: History buffs, ancestry tourism, coastal drive enthusiasts
- Germany/Netherlands: Cycling, hiking, heritage
- France/Spain: Food, culture, scenery
- Australia/New Zealand: Working holiday visitors, long-stay tourists
Domestic/regional:
- Republic of Ireland: Weekend breaks, staycations
- Northern Ireland: Day trips, short breaks
- Great Britain: Long weekends, touring holidays
Niche markets:
- Motorhome/caravan: Currently deterred by ferry
- Cycling: Greenway potential, quiet roads
- Food tourists: Seafood trail, farm produce
- Photography: Landscape, heritage
- Activity: Hiking, water sports, golf
Marketing Channels
Digital:
- Dedicated website (route planner, bookings)
- Social media campaigns (#CelticCoastalDrive)
- Influencer partnerships
- Google/TripAdvisor optimization
- Virtual tour content
Traditional:
- Tourism Ireland global campaigns
- Travel trade (tour operators, travel agents)
- Travel media/journalists (fam trips)
- Print guides & maps
- Signage & wayfinding
Partnerships:
- Tourism Ireland
- Tourism NI
- Fáilte Ireland
- Local councils
- National Trust
- Heritage bodies
🚧 IMPLEMENTATION PATHWAY
Phase 1: Strategic Alignment (Months 0-12)
Actions:
- Joint government agreement
- NI Executive + Irish Government
- Link to Narrow Water Bridge
- Shared Island Fund application
- PEACE+ Programme inclusion
- Tourism sector engagement
- Tourism Ireland endorsement
- Fáilte Ireland partnership
- Tourism NI support
- Ancient East brand extension
- Feasibility study
- Traffic modeling (with tourism component)
- Economic impact (including tourism £)
- Environmental assessment
- Community consultation
Deliverable: Government commitment to both bridges as linked projects
Phase 2: Detailed Planning (Months 12-30)
Actions:
- Engineering design
- Bridge specifications
- Environmental mitigation
- Marine licensing
- Planning approval
- Tourism route development
- Brand creation
- Wayfinding strategy
- Attraction development
- Marketing plan
- Funding package
- Shared Island Fund
- PEACE+ allocation
- UK Levelling Up
- Private sector (if appropriate)
Deliverable: Full approvals & funding secured
Phase 3: Construction (Months 30-66)
Actions:
- Strangford Bridge construction (24-36 months)
- Narrow Water Bridge construction (concurrent/sequential)
- Route infrastructure (signage, viewing points, trails)
- Tourism readiness (accommodation, attractions, marketing)
Deliverable: Both bridges operational
Phase 4: Launch & Marketing (Month 66+)
Actions:
- Grand opening (high-profile event)
- International launch (Tourism Ireland campaign)
- Route promotion (travel trade, media)
- Continuous improvement (visitor feedback, enhancements)
Deliverable: Established international touring route
🎯 POLITICAL & STAKEHOLDER STRATEGY
Key Messages by Audience
Irish Government:
- “Complete the Ancient East vision—extend to Belfast”
- “Shared Island Fund perfect fit”
- “Cross-border tourism economic driver”
- “Good Friday Agreement legacy infrastructure”
UK Government/NI Executive:
- “Levelling Up eastern Ards & Mourne communities”
- “Tourism economic catalyst post-COVID recovery”
- “Complements Narrow Water investment”
- “Regional development & job creation”
- “Strategic infrastructure for NI”
Tourism Ireland:
- “World-class coastal drive product”
- “Competitive with Scotland’s NC500”
- “International marketing opportunity”
- “Enhances Ancient East brand”
- “Year-round tourism extension”
Local Communities:
- “Jobs: 170-280 in tourism alone”
- “Business investment & growth”
- “Property values increase”
- “Services & amenities improvement”
- “Community sustainability”
Environmental Groups:
- “Reduces overall travel distance (eliminates detours)”
- “3,800+ tonnes CO₂ saved from freight efficiency”
- “Sustainable tourism vs air travel”
- “Ferry replacement reduces marine traffic”
- “Careful environmental design”
💼 STAKEHOLDER CO-ORDINATION
Government Agencies (Cross-Border)
Republic of Ireland:
- Department of Tourism, Culture, Arts
- Fáilte Ireland (tourism development)
- Department of Transport
- National Parks & Wildlife Service
- Local authorities (Louth County Council)
Northern Ireland:
- Department for Infrastructure (DfI)
- Tourism NI
- Department of Agriculture, Environment & Rural Affairs (DAERA)
- Local councils (Ards & North Down, Newry Mourne & Down)
Cross-Border Bodies:
- Tourism Ireland (marketing)
- North-South Ministerial Council
- InterTradeIreland
- Special EU Programmes Body (PEACE+)
Tourism Industry Partners
Accommodation:
- Hotels & guesthouses associations
- Caravan & camping site operators
- Hostel networks
- Airbnb hosts/property owners
Attractions:
- National Trust (Castle Ward, Mourne sites)
- Titanic Belfast
- St. Patrick Centre Downpatrick
- Newgrange (Brú na Bóinne)
- Local museums & heritage sites
Activities:
- Outdoor activity providers
- Cycle hire & tour operators
- Water sports companies
- Walking/hiking tour guides
- Food & drink experiences
Tour Operators:
- Incoming tour operators (international groups)
- Coach tour companies
- Self-drive tour specialists
- Adventure travel operators
📈 PERFORMANCE METRICS & MONITORING
Key Performance Indicators (KPIs)
Traffic Metrics:
- Annual vehicle crossings (bridge)
- Tourist vehicle percentage
- Seasonal distribution
- International vs domestic ratio
- Average length of stay
Economic Indicators:
- Tourism spending in corridor
- Bed nights in region
- Restaurant/attraction revenues
- Employment in tourism sector
- Business creation/investment
Tourism Brand:
- Website traffic & bookings
- Social media engagement
- International media coverage
- Tour operator inclusion
- TripAdvisor/review ratings
Environmental:
- Carbon emissions saved
- Traffic reduction on detour routes
- Marine environment monitoring
- Air quality improvements
Baseline Establishment
Before bridge opening:
- Current ferry usage patterns
- Existing tourism spending
- Employment baseline
- Environmental baseline
- Community baseline survey
Post-opening monitoring:
- Year 1, 3, 5, 10 assessments
- Continuous traffic counting
- Annual economic impact studies
- Visitor surveys & satisfaction
- Community impact assessment
🌟 SIGNATURE EXPERIENCES TO DEVELOP
Route Attractions Enhancement
Viewing Points & Interpretation:
- Strangford Lough viewpoint (both sides of bridge)
- Mourne panorama stops (multiple locations)
- Heritage interpretation panels
- Wildlife viewing areas (seals, birds)
- Photography platforms
Active Tourism Infrastructure:
- Greenway extensions (cycle/walk paths)
- Strangford Lough circuit (100km+ cycling route)
- Lecale Way walking trail connections
- Mourne Wall challenge (hiking)
- Water access points (kayaking, sailing)
Food & Drink Trail:
- “Three Ports Seafood Trail” (Ardglass, Portavogie, Kilkeel)
- Farm shops & producers
- Craft breweries & distilleries
- Artisan food makers
- Restaurant networks
Heritage Experiences:
- Castle Ward (Game of Thrones tours)
- St. Patrick Trail (Downpatrick focus)
- Viking heritage (Strangford)
- Monastic sites circuit
- Famine & emigration heritage
Signature Events:
- Annual coastal marathon/cycling sportive
- Seafood festivals (each port)
- Heritage weekends
- Dark skies events (Mournes)
- Music & culture festivals
🔗 SYNERGY WITH OTHER INITIATIVES
Game of Thrones Legacy
Northern Ireland filming locations:
- Castle Ward (Winterfell)
- Tollymore Forest (Haunted Forest)
- Audley’s Castle
- Inch Abbey
Tourism impact:
- GoT Studio Tour (Belfast) major attraction
- Location tours popular
- International draw (especially USA)
- Bridge enables easier location touring
Titanic Heritage
Belfast Titanic Quarter:
- Titanic Belfast museum (global attraction)
- SS Nomadic
- Titanic Hotel
- Maritime heritage
Connection:
- Belfast start point for coastal drive
- “From Titanic to Ancient Ireland” narrative
- Cruise ship tourists (Belfast port)
- Bridge enables day trips from Belfast
Active Travel Networks
National Cycle Network:
- NCN Route 9 (Belfast-Newry)
- Comber Greenway
- Planned extensions
Walking Routes:
- Ulster Way sections
- Lecale Way
- Mourne Way
- St. Patrick’s Way
Bridge enhancement:
- Pedestrian/cycle lanes on bridge
- Closes gaps in networks
- Enables circular routes
- Multi-day touring
Dark Skies & Nature Tourism
Mournes Dark Sky Park:
- International Dark Sky status
- Stargazing tourism
- Observatory facilities
- Growing niche market
Strangford Lough:
- Marine Conservation Zone
- National Nature Reserve
- Wildlife tourism (seals, birds, otters)
- Eco-tourism potential
Bridge benefits:
- Better access to both areas
- Circular route opportunities
- Reduced light pollution vs ferry terminal
- Nature-based tourism growth
💡 INNOVATION OPPORTUNITIES
Digital Route Experience
Mobile App Development:
- Interactive route planner
- Augmented reality (heritage sites)
- Audio guides (storytelling)
- Real-time information (traffic, weather, events)
- Booking integration (accommodation, activities)
Smart Tourism:
- QR codes at attractions
- Digital passports (collect stamps)
- Gamification (challenges, rewards)
- Social sharing integration
- Virtual tour previews
Sustainable Tourism
Green Credentials:
- EV charging network (every 30-50km)
- Cycle hire schemes
- Public transport links (bus, rail)
- Carbon offset options
- Sustainable accommodation certification
Visitor Management:
- Capacity monitoring
- Season spreading (off-peak incentives)
- Alternative route suggestions
- Timed entry (major attractions)
- Parking management
Film & Media Location
Tourism Promotion Through Media:
- Film/TV location scouting support
- Screen tourism development
- Documentary partnerships
- Social media influencer programs
- Photography exhibitions
Content Creation:
- Professional photography library
- Drone footage (scenic)
- Time-lapse compilations
- Seasonal showcases
- User-generated content campaigns
🚨 RISK MANAGEMENT
Tourism Development Risks
Risk Mitigation
Over-tourism in sensitive areas Visitor management plans, capacity limits,
season spreading
Environmental impact Monitoring programs, adaptive management,
education
Community concerns Early consultation, local employment
priority, benefit sharing
Weather/seasonality Year-round activities, indoor attractions,
event programming
Competition from other routes Unique positioning, quality standards,
continuous innovation
Economic downturn Domestic market focus, value offerings,
resilience planning
Dependencies & Contingencies
Critical dependencies:
- Narrow Water Bridge completion (parallel timeline desirable)
- Tourism Ireland marketing commitment
- Local tourism infrastructure readiness
- Accommodation capacity expansion
- Environmental approvals
Contingency plans:
- Phased tourism development (if Narrow Water delayed)
- Stand-alone Ards Peninsula promotion
- Three-port seafood focus (less dependent on Narrow Water)
- Domestic/regional market emphasis initially
- Flexible marketing budget allocation
🏆 SUCCESS CASE STUDIES
Øresund Bridge (Denmark-Sweden)
Context:
- Opened 2000
- Connects Copenhagen (Denmark) to Malmö (Sweden)
- 8km combined bridge-tunnel
- Tourism boom: Both cities benefited massively
Lessons:
- Cross-border infrastructure catalyzes tourism
- “Two countries, one region” marketing successful
- Regional economic integration accelerated
- Culture & tourism cooperation strengthened
Strangford parallel:
- Cross-border cooperation model
- Tourism integration opportunity
- Economic corridor creation
- Political will essential
Millau Viaduct (France)
Context:
- Opened 2004
- Southern France, 2.5km bridge
- Removed bottleneck on Paris-Barcelona route
- Became tourist attraction itself
Impact:
- 3-4 million visitors annually (to view bridge)
- Regional tourism increased 30%+
- Local economy transformed
- Design excellence celebrated globally
Lessons:
- Infrastructure can be tourism attraction
- Design quality matters
- Regional benefits exceed transport value
- Viewing facilities important
Strangford potential:
- Architectural excellence
- Viewing areas both shores
- Bridge lighting/design feature
- Instagram/photography appeal
Confederation Bridge (Canada)
Context:
- Opened 1997
- Connects Prince Edward Island to mainland
- 12.9km bridge (longest in world over ice-covered waters)
- Replaced ferry service
Impact:
- PEI tourism increased 60% first decade
- Year-round accessibility
- Economic transformation
- Population growth reversed decline
Lessons:
- Ferry replacement unlocks potential
- Island/peninsula connectivity crucial
- Tourism sector primary beneficiary
- Long-term regional transformation
Strangford direct parallel:
- Ferry replacement
- Peninsula connectivity
- Tourism growth opportunity
- Economic catalyst potential
💰 FUNDING PROPOSAL FRAMEWORK
Multi-Source Funding Strategy
Estimated total investment:
- Strangford Bridge: £50-150M (engineering-dependent)
- Route infrastructure: £10-20M (signage, trails, facilities)
- Marketing & brand: £5-10M (3-year launch campaign)
- Total: £65-180M
Proposed Funding Mix
1. Irish Shared Island Fund (30-40%)
- Request: €30-50M
- Rationale: Cross-border tourism, Ancient East extension
- Precedent: Narrow Water Bridge commitment
- Alignment: Shared Island strategy priorities
2. UK Levelling Up Fund (30-40%)
- Request: £30-50M
- Rationale: Regional development, tourism, connectivity
- Alignment: NI priorities, coastal communities
- Precedent: Major infrastructure awards
3. EU PEACE+ Programme (15-25%)
- Request: €15-30M
- Rationale: Cross-border cooperation, economic regeneration
- Theme fit: Economic transformation, peaceful communities
- Joint application: Both governments
4. Tourism Development (5-10%)
- Tourism Ireland: Marketing investment
- Fáilte Ireland: Route development
- Tourism NI: Infrastructure support
- Total: £5-10M
5. Private Sector/Local (5-10%)
- Land value capture
- Developer contributions
- Local councils
- Toll revenue bonds (if applicable)
- Total: £5-10M
Application Strategy
Phase 1: Strategic alignment
- Both governments agree joint application
- Link Strangford + Narrow Water as package
- Tourism economic case emphasized
- Cross-border cooperation highlighted
Phase 2: Parallel applications
- Shared Island Fund (Irish Gov)
- Levelling Up Fund (UK Gov)
- PEACE+ (joint application)
- Coordinated timing
Phase 3: Gap funding
- Tourism agencies
- Private sector engagement
- Bond financing (if toll-based)
- Phased delivery if needed
📋 RECOMMENDED ACTIONS – IMMEDIATE
Next 30 Days
1. Stakeholder Briefings
- Tourism Ireland: Present integrated vision
- Fáilte Ireland: Ancient East extension discussion
- Tourism NI: Strategic alignment
- Both governments: Linked project proposal
2. Documentation Development
- Update feasibility study (add tourism dimension)
- Economic impact revision (include tourism £)
- Create integrated funding proposal
- Develop marketing concepts
3. Political Engagement
- NI Executive ministers briefing
- Irish Government contacts (Dept of Tourism)
- Cross-party political support
- North-South Ministerial Council
Next 90 Days
4. Funding Applications
- Shared Island Fund submission
- Levelling Up Fund application
- PEACE+ expression of interest
- Tourism agency commitments
5. Tourism Sector Mobilization
- Industry stakeholder forum
- Tour operator presentations
- Accommodation sector engagement
- Activity provider network
6. Public Campaign
- “Complete the Coastal Drive” messaging
- Visuals: Rendered bridge, route maps
- Social media launch
- Media engagement (travel press)
Next 12 Months
7. Detailed Route Planning
- Signage & wayfinding design
- Viewing points identification
- Greenway connections
- Attraction enhancement
8. Brand Development
- Route name finalization
- Visual identity creation
- Website development
- Marketing materials
9. Partnership Agreements
- Government MOU (both jurisdictions)
- Tourism Ireland partnership
- Local council cooperation
- Private sector engagement
🎯 CONCLUSION
The Strangford Lough Crossing, combined with Narrow Water Bridge, represents a transformational opportunity to create one of Europe’s premier coastal touring routes.
The Compelling Case
✅ Completes the A2 coastal route (Belfast to Dublin)
✅ Unlocks Ireland’s Ancient East northern extension
✅ Cross-border cooperation showcase project
✅ Tourism economic catalyst (£15-30M annually at maturity)
✅ Employment creation (170-280 tourism jobs)
✅ International marketing opportunity
✅ Strategic alignment with both governments
✅ Strong funding synergies (Shared Island, Levelling Up, PEACE+)
✅ Freight & tourism dual benefits
✅ Environmental positives (reduced travel, sustainable tourism)
✅ Community development for isolated areas
The Timing is Perfect
- Narrow Water Bridge approved and funded
- Shared Island Fund actively seeking projects
- PEACE+ Programme aligned priorities
- Ireland’s Ancient East established brand seeking growth
- Post-COVID tourism recovery investment phase
- Cross-border cooperation political momentum
The Ask
For government decision-makers:
- Designate as strategic national infrastructure
- Joint funding commitment (ROI + UK)
- Link to Narrow Water Bridge as integrated project
- Fast-track approvals (planning, environmental)
For tourism agencies:
- Endorsement & partnership commitments
- Marketing investment allocation
- Route development support
- International promotion integration
For stakeholders:
- Active support & advocacy
- Joint campaign participation
- Investment readiness (businesses, communities)
The Strangford Lough Crossing isn’t just about connecting two shores—it’s about connecting two nations, completing a world-class tourism product, and transforming the economic future of coastal communities.
Let’s make the Celtic Coastal Drive a reality.
Prepared for: www.strangfordloughcrossing.org