Cardiff hotel owner says the council’s city centre plans will have a 'dire' impact on tourism
he manager of Cardiff’s oldest hotel has said the council’s plans for the city centre will have a “dire” impact on tourism.
Jon Swingler, general manager of the 150-year-old Royal Hotel, argued that the lack of car access to the city centre will put people off from visiting.
He has also hit out at the city’s “binge drinking” culture and public transport system, saying they are partly to blame for the dip in standards.
In an impassioned letter to the council, Mr Swingler said: “We, and many businesses in our area of the city are deeply concerned about the damage that lack of car access around the Central Square development will do to our businesses and the future of Cardiff as a tourist destination.”
He added: “The knock-on effect to Cardiff’s status as a tourist destination looks dire.”
The angry hotelier is holding a public meeting on Wednesday and has invited local business owners and politicians to air their views.
The pedestrian entrance to the Royal Hotel
Mr Swingler says his letter has already received positive responses from Conservative, Liberal Democrat and Plaid Cymru councillors.
The hotel chief said the council’s desire to improve the quality of its city centre hotels is being undermined by a transport policy which will make it harder for guests to access the city by car.
The 60-room hotel, which has been on St Mary Street since 1866, lost car access to its main entrance when the street was pedestrianised in 2010.
Since then, it and three other hotels have relied on the Wood Street carpark. But now this is being demolished as part of the regeneration of Central Square, Mr Swingler is worried he will lose more business.
St Mary Street is 'a very different place after dark'
“Many hotels are finding the need to downgrade to make ends meet, or are considering selling up if trading conditions do not ease. The result will be a preponderance of budget hotels, attracting the kind of binge drinking night-time economy that Cardiff has been saddled with for too long,” he said.
He added that St Mary Street was “a very different place after dark” and that “we should not be proud that Cardiff features so heavily for drunk and disorderly behaviour”.
The car park in Central Square is set to be demolished
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Mr Swingler went on to write that Cardiff’s public transport “pales in comparison” to European standards and that it must be improved if the city wants to go car free.
He added: “Car access to a hotel coupled with nearby parking facilities is essential to sustain and encourage visitors to the city. They do not have this.
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