LIVERPOOL   WATERFRONT

WORLD HERITAGE SITE

(Please allow time for pictures to load -
some stunning views of a world famous site)



Sir Neil Cossons, Chairman of English Heritage supported the nomination, saying:

"Today's announcement confirms what many people of Liverpool have always known -

Liverpool is beyond question one of the great cities of the world. 

Liverpool's historic buildings are instantly recognisable and are a proud reminder that this was a hugely important maritime and mercantile city on the world stage; gateway to the new world, Liverpool was the greatest seaport of the old. 

"Today we see Liverpool's future intimately bound up with the celebration of its distinguished past.  21st century Liverpool is undergoing an extraordinary period of development that will change the way the city looks forever.  There are great opportunities for regeneration and prosperity, but we must ensure that we do not unknowingly lose the very things that make Liverpool special.  World Heritage status will help focus attention on the need to manage change carefully and to take advantage of the enormous asset that the city's historic environment affords us."

Councillor Mike Storey CBE, Leader of the Liverpool Council, said:

"There are few examples of world-beating architecture that can match Liverpool's imposing waterfront and its cultural buildings. Liverpool is the World in One City, and this is reflected in its rich architectural legacy."

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Liverpool was founded by Royal Charter in 1207 and its commercial port is the ultimate exemplar of Britain's global influence from the 18th century to the early 20th century.

By the 19th century Liverpool was the greatest Trans-Atlantic port in Europe, eventually encompassing some 120 ha of wet docks enclosed by 10 km of fortress-like dock walls. 

The World Heritage Site includes twelve surviving historic docks, with the magnificent Albert Dock and Pier Head at their centre, six monumental dockside warehouses and many other important dock structures such as the dock security walls. 

The port also contains one of the finest, and most complete, Victorian commercial districts in Britain and

The stunning trio of buildings at the Pier Head
form one of the
most dramatic and recognisable waterfronts
in the world.




The site from Wirral  


WORLD HERITAGE SITES - BACKGROUND 

Adopted by UNESCO in 1972, the World Heritage Convention established the World Heritage List
as a means of recognising that some places are of sufficient global importance
for the international community as a whole to oversee their conservation.

One hundred and fifty-six nations adhere to the convention, and in doing so they pledge to care
for the World Heritage Sites in their territory as part of protecting their national heritage.
UNESCO's World Heritage Committee is the focus for operation of the World Heritage Convention.
In assessing sites for inscription, the Committee is advised by experts
- the International Council on Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS) and
the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN).

The Committee also administers other aspects of the World Heritage Convention,
including monitoring of the condition of Sites. 

The UK was successful in its bid to become a member of the World Heritage Committee in October 2001,
but has agreed to serve only a four-year term (rather than six) in order to ensure that the Committee is globally representative
In recent years the Committee has attempted to secure a better balanced World Heritage List
by encouraging nominations from parts of the world, such as Africa, Asia and the Pacific region,
which are not currently well represented.

Since 2002 state parties have also been restricted to one nomination per annum, up to a total of 30 worldwide.
World Heritage Sites are nominated by the appropriate nation state.
They are then evaluated by either ICOMOS and/ or IUCN. 
The final decision is taken by the World Heritage Committee.

Before a site can be inscribed on the World Heritage List the Committee now insist on
the preparation of a management plan.
In order to assist the Committee in evaluating potential sites within the widest possible context,
nation states are require to submit a Tentative List of proposals likely to be put forward
over a five to ten year period. 

In June 1999, the DCMS sent UNESCO a Tentative List of 25 sites in the UK from which
further nominations would be made.  Four sites from this list -
New Lanark, Derwent Valley Mills, Saltaire and the Dorset and East Devon Coast (Natural)
- were inscribed by the World Heritage Committee at its meeting in Helsinki in December 2001. 

A decision will be taken in June this year whether or not to inscribe the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew - the UK's nomination for World Heritage Site status in 2002.
Following decisions taken at the June 2002 World Heritage Committee meeting in Budapest
the List currently comprises 730 sites in total, of which 24 belong to the UK.
WELL-KNOWN GLOBAL WORLD HERITAGE SITES
(as at January 2003 - Year of Inscription shown in brackets)

Great Barrier Reef, Australia (1981)
Historic Centre of Vienna, Austria (2001)
Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks, Canada (1984)
Great Wall of China, China (1987)
Galapagos Islands, Ecuador (1978, 2001)
Historic Centre of Prague, Czech Republic (1992)
Memphis and its Necropolis, Pyramid Fields from Giza to Dahshur, Egypt (1979)
Paris, Banks of the Seine, France (1991)
Palace of Versailles, France (1979)
Acropolis, Greece (1987)
Vatican City, Holy See (1984)
 Budapest, the Banks of the Danube and the Buda Castle Quarter (1987, 2002)
 Taj Mahal (1983)
 Masada, Israel (2001)
Historic Centre of Florence, Italy (1982)
Venice and its Lagoon, Italy (1987)
 Historic Monuments of Ancient Kyoto, Japan (1994)
 Petra, Jordan (1985)
 Kremlin and Red Square, Russian Federation (1990)
 Ancient City of Damascus, Syrian Arab Republic (1979)
UK's WORLD HERITAGE SITES as at January 2003
(Year of Inscription shown in brackets)

- Giant's Causeway (Natural) (1986)
- Ironbridge Gorge (1986)
- Stonehenge, Avebury and associated sites (1986)
- Durham Castle and Cathedral (1986)
- Studley Royal Park and Fountains Abbey (1986)
- Castles and Town Walls of King Edward in Gwynedd (1986)
- St Kilda (Natural) (1986)
- Blenheim Palace (1987)
- City of Bath (1987)
- Hadrian's Wall (1987)
- Westminster Palace, Westminster Abbey and St Margaret's Church (1987)
- Henderson Island (Natural - Pitcairn Group) (1988)
- Tower of London (1988)
- Canterbury Cathedral, St Augustine's Abbey and St Martin's Church (1988)
- Edinburgh Old and New Towns (1995)
- Gough Island Wildlife Reserve (Natural - St Helena Group) (1995)
- Maritime Greenwich (1997)
- Heart of Neolithic Orkney (1999)
- The Historic Town of St George, Bermuda, and Related Fortifications (2000)
- Blaenavon Industrial landscape (2000)
- Dorset & East Devon Coast (Natural) (2001)
- Derwent Valley Mills (2001)
- New Lanark (2001)
- Saltaire (2001)

More stunning views:

Click here to view a panoramic view of the Waterfront
or
Click here for a view at night.

   A little different to what it used to look like :

circa 1940s waterfront

And what it may well look like in the near future
with the Leeds - Liverpool canal linked to the Albert Dock
and a new Cruise Terminal in the River:

Proposed canal link to Albert Dock

Side view - from across Albert Dock

waterfront from Albert Dock

If you would like any further information regarding Liverpool and
what there is to see and do, then send me an email by clicking here