º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Opinionopinion

Birmingham needs to be a great place to live, not just visit

It was a significant year for Birmingham. But it wasn’t the reputational leap forward it could have been. 

Christmas celebrations in Centenary Square, as seen from the Library of Birmingham

I knew 2013 would be significant for Birmingham.

Not that I actually committed these thoughts to paper last year. I bottled it, lest I was castigated a year later for an impertinent pre-empting of the future.

Not this year. This year, I shall fearlessly use mind power, venturing forward to provide a flawlessly accurate account of Birmingham: 2014.

And no – the spurious nature of this column has nothing to do with seasonal Baileys over-consumption.

Looking back, it was a significant year for Birmingham. But it wasn’t the reputational leap forward it could’ve been.

The Library of Birmingham represented the city’s undoubted highlight of 2013: a huge investment that still managed to capture the country’s imagination and largely defy criticism.

The increasingly effective work of the city’s marketers has persuaded national and international media that Birmingham is now a go-to destination for tourists. Our manufacturing industry is guiding the way towards economic health.

Nevertheless, this infuriating city followed each ladder ascent with a snakey downwards slide.