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Comment: 2022 Games Cultural Festival will give us back our mojo after covid

Ros Kerslake, chief executive of the National Lottery Heritage Fund, outlines the potential economic and cultural benefits to Birmingham away from the sporting action in 2022

From the grand Town Hall to the bustling Jewellery Quarter and creative streets of Digbeth, Birmingham has a wonderfully unique and vibrant cultural heritage.

And, although many of the jewels in Birmingham's crown are currently unable to welcome visitors, that's all set to change with one of the most exciting events in West Midlands' cultural history.

Last month, we were delighted to announce the National Lottery Heritage Fund was investing £3 million into the Birmingham 2022 Commonwealth Games Cultural Festival.

The games, which start on July 28, is an amazing undertaking, with 6,500 athletes and officials from 72 Commonwealth nations and territories, more than 1.3 million ticketed spectators and a broadcast audience of more than one billion.

The organising committee will, at its peak, employ 1,200 people and recruit 12,500 volunteers.

But it's not just about the games.

A year-and-a-half from now the West Midlands will feel like the centre of the world and there will be no better time to shine a light on all the things that make this area such a great and unique place to live, work and visit.