Until this weekend I’d never been to Liverpool before. Actually, that isn’t strictly true. I did come here as a small child with my parents to go to the International Garden Festival. But that was a long time ago and we didn’t see anything of the city itself.
But having now been to Liverpool this weekend I am pretty impressed by the place. In some cities, the people who live there know they are on the up and are confident in their success, and develop a kind of arrogant swagger about their home town. Liverpool isn’t like that. They know it doesn’t have a great reputation but they are also determined to change people’s minds. What Liverpool has is the feel of being an important commercial city, a bit like Leeds and Manchester, but it is also a bit more down to earth and rough around the edges than them, and so in that sense is a bit like Sheffield. I suppose it’s those two things combined that makes me like the place.
I spent Friday afternoon and today doing some sightseeing around the city. Although I went to the fairly obvious choice of Tate Liverpool, I also went to Williamson’s Tunnels which I had heard about and was intrigued to see. They were both interesting in very different ways and I am glad I went. But I also spent a lot of time just looking around the place to get a feel for what it is like. The thing that struck me more than anything was the impresive architecture, but also how much redevelopment is going on.
I knew that Liverpool was being turned around, but you don’t appreciate the scale of it until you go there. At the Liberal Democrat Conference, Councillors Warren Bradley and Mike Storey have made a big thing about how the Liberal Democrats have turned the city around and if it wasn’t for them then the city would not be undergoing the huge renaissance that it is. Well I believe them. The city is certainly improving a lot, and from the press I have read (so not just Lib Dem spin) a lot of it is down to the Lib Dems taking control of the city. I know they have had a lot of problems too, particularly in relation to being the European Capital of Culture, but I can honestly say they seem to be doing an excellent job. With so much building still in progress it does detract a bit from the image at the moment, but I am sure when it is all done it will be great. And loads of people I have spoken to this weekend have said the same.
The Lib Dems in Liverpool have done an excellent job of selling their city to the conference delegates. They said to people at conference that they wanted people to go away after this weekend impressed, and then to come back. Well Liverpool has impressed me and I will definitely be back, and I hope Lib Dem Conference will be too.
NOTE AT 21:24
Seems like I was far less original than I thought when I came up with the title for this posting. If lots of people said it then maybe they all heard it from me. Not much of a brag though as it isn’t exactly roll on the floor laughing material.




1 response so far ↓
lydia // 11 March 2008 at 7:15 pm
Glad you enjoyed your stay - you’d have been right at the heart of the building work down at the arena on the waterfront!
I think you’re right when you say Liverpool is a lot like Sheffield, I was at Sheffield Uni for 3 (happy) years, and the two cities felt very similar to me too. Maybe it’s because both cities are rather constrained by their geography, and both are having to come to terms with a future that has to be very different from their past.
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