Tall Ships will sail despite construction around harbour - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Tall Ships will sail despite construction around harbour

Organizers of the 2017 Tall Ships Regatta are making accommodations for construction along the Halifax harbourfront.

Shuttles, boardwalk and 'road train' will make event more accessible, say organizers

Pedestrians crowd the Halifax waterfront as a tall ship visits in 2012. (Michael Dick/CBC)

Organizers of a regatta that will bring 30tallships to Halifax this summerare taking steps to make things easier for pedestrians neara construction zone on thewaterfront.

Rendez-Vous2017 Tall Ships Regatta isworking with Halifax Transit to provide shuttles tobypass the construction. There will also be a "road train," orvehicle-powered open carriage,along Lower Water Street.

Afloating boardwalk will allow pedestrians to cross the water from theCable Wharf to the wharf in front of the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic. Ferries will run to McNabsIsland and Georges Island, where concerts and picnics will take place.

Detours are "just another way to keep the experience positive," said Jennifer Angel, acting president and CEO of the Waterfront Development Corporation, at a news conference Wednesday.

Major construction project underway

Work has already begun on a massive developmenton afive-acre site next to the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic. The Queen's Marque projectwill include a hotel, luxury condos, office, commercial and public space. The $200-million development is expected to be completed in 2019.

The Tall Ships Regatta is arace organizedby Sail Training International. About 30wooden ships from all over the world will visit Halifaxand 10 other ports in Nova Scotiafrom July 29 to Aug. 1.

The CBC will be presenting free concerts, including appearances by Natalie MacMaster and Symphony Nova Scotia. Cannons and fireworks on July 29 will commemorate Canada's 150th anniversary.

Construction of the Queen's Marque development project, pictured in an artist's rendering, is already underway on the Halifax waterfront. (http://my-waterfront.ca/)

More visitors expected this year

"This summer the world is coming to Nova Scotia and we will showcase our province," said provincial Tourism MinisterMark Furey. "Our artists, our musicians, our boat builders, our seafood producers and many others will join forces to celebrate our maritime culture and show the world what makes our province so special."

The last time the regatta came to Halifax, said Angel,"in theneighbourhoodof 300,000 to 600,000" people came to see it. She saidbecause of events celebrating Canada's sesquicentennialand the number of ships at the regatta, "we can fully expect more people this year."

Angel said the construction, though inconvenient, will be good for Halifax in the long term, boosting tourism and the economy.

"It's yet another reason, in a few years, to come to Halifax."