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Economic Development

Manchester wants to be a £15bn tourist city – here’s how it will do it (with the help of Manchester City and Oasis)

Tourism leaders say Greater Manchester should become the most visited º£½ÇÊÓÆµ city-region outside of London and a top 20 European destination

Victoria Braddock, managing director at Marketing Manchester, at the strategy launch(Image: Ian Howarth)

Greater Manchester is aiming to become a £15bn visitor hotspot, surpassing Edinburgh as the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's most visited location outside of London.

Key figures from Manchester City, Manchester Airport, and the mastermind behind the colossal Trafford City development joined tourism minister Sir Chris Bryant at the Midland Hotel this week to unveil the city's fresh tourism strategy. Currently, Greater Manchester ranks third in the list of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's most visited destinations, behind London and Edinburgh.

In 2023, the region welcomed 1.7 million international visitors. By 2019, the visitor economy was estimated to contribute £9.5bn to Greater Manchester.

This figure is projected to reach around £10bn by the end of the year. A new blueprint – the Greater Manchester Strategy for the Visitor Economy 2025-2030 – stipulates that the sector needs to expand by 50 per cent by 2030 to achieve its ambitious goals.

Among the speakers at an event was Danny Wilson, managing director of Manchester City Operations, who discussed the ongoing revamp of the area surrounding the Etihad Stadium. With Co-Op Live having opened last year and work on the North Stand extension in progress, future plans include a hotel, a museum, and additional space for events and concerts.

These developments are set to transform the vicinity of the stadium and Co-Op Live into a year-round destination, not just for major events.

Showing the audience an image of Noel Gallagher and Pep Guardiola, he said: "In reality it's about fusing together music and football."

Manchester City Council leader Bev Craig announced a 'summer of music and culture' for the area, aiming to leverage the significant global attention from this year's mammoth Oasis reunion concerts. And she said the tourism strategy would be about 'so much more than just the city centre'.