Following the UK Government’s new roadmap out of the Covid-19 crisis, tourism bosses pick top things to look forward to in the remainder of 2021.

Marketing Manchester, the organisation that promotes Greater Manchester on the national and international stage and incorporates the tourism board and official website VisitManchester.com, has revealed 21 exciting new tourism developments for visitors to look forward to in 2021 and beyond.

After a challenging year for tourism globally, and a slow start for 2021, Greater Manchester is positioning itself as a strong contender to bounce back quickly following the UK Government’s publication of the country’s roadmap out of the Covid-19 crisis.

The city-region has a long list of tourism developments coming up within the rest of 2021 and through to 2023, meaning that visitors to Greater Manchester have plenty of new and exciting places and events to incorporate into their visit whenever they choose to travel in the coming years.

At the top of the list for many visitors in 2021 will be the new RHS Garden Bridgewater (1), The Royal Horticultural Society’s first new garden in 17 years, which will open in May in the historic grounds of Worsley New Hall in Salford. The 154-acre garden is currently the largest gardening project in Europe and will feature one of the UK’s biggest Walled Gardens, a Kitchen Garden, orchards, and a Chinese Streamside Garden amongst other spaces. In a similar vein, widespread greater appreciation of outdoor space during the Covid-19 crisis will have people flocking to Northern Roots (2), a 160-acre space in Oldham that plans to become the UK’s largest urban farm and eco-park.

In Manchester city centre, a series of expansions at well-loved cultural venues will complete throughout 2021 starting with a new Special Exhibition Gallery at the Science and Industry Museum (3), which will open in May in line with Government restrictions being lifted. It will launch with Top Secret, a free exhibition that will explore over a century’s worth of communications intelligence through hand-written documents, declassified files and previously unseen artefacts from the Science Museum Group’s and GCHQ’s historic collections.

This will be closely followed in summer by Manchester Jewish Museum (4); housed inside a former synagogue built in 1874, it has been overhauled to double its original size and will feature a brand-new gallery, learning studio and kitchen, shop and café, alongside the majorly renovated synagogue which will also double up as a performance space. Then in November 2021, a dedicated Fashion Gallery is set to open at Manchester Art Gallery (5) with an opening exhibition focused on male image and the ‘dandy’ style fashion, made popular in the late 18th and early 19th century.

Several performance venues across the city-region will also reopen after significant upgrades, including: Octagon Bolton (6), one of the region’s best-loved theatres, which will welcome visitors back in 2021 after three years of redevelopment work to the town centre building; Contact (7), the UK’s leading young person’s arts organisation, which has also undertaken a complete transformation over three years and will reopen in autumn 2021 with the first dedicated space for art, health and science in a UK theatre; and Manchester’s oldest music venue, Band on the Wall (8) which will expand into a derelict Victorian building to the rear of the venue and will start hosting gigs for up to 540 people from September 2021.

A collection of high-profile events that have been confirmed for 2021 also make it onto the list of things to look forward to this year. A major highlight will be the return of eighteen days of dynamic, innovative and forward-thinking new work as part of the biennial Manchester International Festival (9) in July. Following a successful 2019 outing which featured work from Yoko Ono, Idris Elba, Skepta and David Lynch, this summer’s event will be a Festival for our times with work by some of the world’s most exciting artists responding to the moment we’re in.

After a year without many of the city’s most iconic events in 2020, it’s arguable that any event in 2021 will hold a special significance with residents and visitors this year, however, Manchester Pride (10) in August captures the very spirit of the people of Manchester – their warmth, diversity and proud communities – and promises to be an unmissable event. And if that were not enough, towns across Greater Manchester will be playing a key part in the Rugby League World Cup and Women’s Rugby League World Cup tournaments (11) throughout October and November, with both finals taking place back-to-back at Old Trafford on 27 November.

Manchester’s hotel scene has boomed in recent years and will be joined by some exciting new additions in 2021. Scottish beer brewing giants BrewDog have announced that they will open their first hotel in England in June, following the success of the DogHouse (12) brand in Scotland and the USA. The 18-bedroom hotel will feature Punk IPA on tap in every room, beer fridges in the showers, a rooftop terrace with fire pit, and will allow guests to bring their pets. Also new for 2021 will be climate-conscious brand Qbic (13), bringing their fourth European hotel to Manchester in May, with rooms made from largely recycled materials and a series of quirky sustainable initiatives and rewards for guests. Alongside these new brand hotels, several of the city’s existing hotels have undergone dramatic refurbishments, including The Midland Hotel and The Edwardian Manchester; however, the most noticeable change comes from the former Principal Manchester which has re-emerged as Kimpton Clocktower Hotel (14).

Elsewhere in the region, building on Manchester’s UNESCO City of Literature status, awarded in 2017, Manchester Poetry Library (15) will open in 2021 as part of Manchester Writing School at Manchester Metropolitan University. The new library will add to a rich literary tourism trail that includes the iconic John Rylands and Chetham’s Libraries, as well as Elizabeth Gaskell’s House (16) which will have a new reason to visit from May when a recreation of the celebrated author’s bedroom is added to the property. Wigan Pier (17) will also build on, or rather reshape, its literary connection– made famous by George Orwell’s 1937 book, The Road to Wigan Pier – when the long-vacant 18th Century industrial buildings of the pier are transformed into a new neighbourhood waterside attraction in 2021.

A brand-new family entertainment attraction celebrating ITV’s popular show I’m A Celebrity… Get Me out Of Here! is set to open at the new The Watergardens development at MediaCityUK. The I’m A Celebrity… Jungle Challenge attraction (18) will bring an exciting mix of tasks and trials based on the hit show, including jungle zip lines, treetop rope courses and climbing walls in summer 2021. Meanwhile, over the other side of the water at MediaCityUK, a poignant moment in November 2021 will see the iconic poppies structures return to Greater Manchester. POPPIES will be displayed permanently for the first time within the Air Shard of the architecturally renowned Imperial War Museum North (19).

Greater Manchester’s thriving food and drink scene is raring to go (20) with a host of new venues and operators that either opened during the pandemic – see Four Side Pizza and What the Pitta – or are due to open as soon as they can do so from May. In the latter camp are places like Ramona which will be serving up Detroit style pizza in a former M.O.T garage, new underground food halls Society and Hello Oriental, cocktail bar Schofield’s and live music venue The Blues Kitchen.

The runaway success of venues that launched during the Covid-19 crisis was Escape to Freight Island (21), which opened as a 600-seat open-air venue, with live music alongside street-style food and drink from ten independent traders. The site will be further developed in 2021, taking over the cavernous inner parts of the former Mayfield Station, with more vendors and long-term plans for events, working in a holistic way with music partners such as The Warehouse Project. Escape to Freight Island will be one of the must-visit places for those looking to party and reconnect with friends from April 2021.

There is also much more to come in Greater Manchester beyond 2021 which tourism bosses are hoping will sustain increased visitor numbers over the coming years. Highlights include a transformation at Manchester Museum to add a South Asia Gallery and a new China Gallery, due to open in August 2022 followed by the highly anticipated opening of The Factory, a world-class cultural space designed by Rem Koolhaas’s architects Office for Metropolitan Architecture (OMA), due to be completed in late 2022. At 13,300 square metres, The Factory will be ultra-flexible, enabling large-scale artistic work of invention and ambition that is not made anywhere else in the world.

Then in 2023 Manchester’s first new city centre park in over 100 years, Mayfield Park, is set to open, as well as the UK’s first city-based wellbeing resort Therme, a new large-scale music venue, Co-op Live Arena, and Modern Surf Manchester surf lagoon, from the same company behind Surf Snowdonia.

Sheona Southern, Managing Director of Marketing Manchester, said: “Like many destinations globally, Greater Manchester has felt the devastating effects of Covid-19; however, the city-region is in a strong position for recovery, and we are now looking ahead to the future with exciting developments on the horizon offering visitors a plethora of reasons to visit in 2021 and beyond.

“The team at Marketing Manchester have chosen 21 of the top things to look forward to across the rest of year and beyond, including new outdoor experiences, rich new cultural developments, refreshed and refurbished hotels, diverse food and drink offering, and some truly world-leading events; all of which expand on Greater Manchester’s already vibrant visitor offer.

“Visitors can be confident they will be safe whilst enjoying a visit to Greater Manchester, and we are excited and ready to offer our famous warm welcome once again.”

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