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Sunbury Plantation House,
one of Barbados’ historic attractions, was reopened after undergoing major renovations.
New owner Martin Ince, of Foster & Ince, had promising to create on its reopening a world-class attraction. Ince bought the 300-year-old property, located at Oldbury, St Philip, last year.
Twenty-five workers, some whom have been employed at Sunbury for the past 23 years, were severed and would get an opportunity to return when Sunbury reopens.
“ We have to do pretty major renovations during the summer of 2018 and we will announce the reopening date during the summer,” he said.
Without going into details, he revealed that there would be additions to the plantation house, but the grand architecture would remain intact.
“It is the only plantation open house in Barbados that is completely opened as a business attraction on all three floors – that is going to remain unchanged. We are going to be sprucing things up and making additions to the property, improve the product that was there and make it into a world class attraction,” the tourism executive said.
Sunbury, which was built in 1660 and still features mahogany antiques, old prints and a unique collection of horse-drawn carriages, has served as a major tourist attraction. It also has a restaurant and bar and was used for weddings and other functions.
Sunbury was built by Matthew Chapman, one of the early English planters on Barbados. It was bought and restored by late optometrist Dr Keith Melville in 1981 who opened it to the public four years later. ( internet information )
Prime Minister of Barbados Mia Amor Mottley receiving a gift of a painting of Sunbury Plantation Great House from New owner Martin Ince during the official opening ceremony today.
TOURISM TO BE DRIVEN BY PUBLIC/PRIVATE SECTOR
PARTNERSHIPS
From next year, the marketing of Barbados’ tourism product will be driven more by public/private sector partnerships, as Government moves away from being the major sponsor of tourism marketing. And, Minister of Tourism and International Transport, Kerrie Symmonds, has indicated that within the coming days, the Barbados Tourism Marketing Inc. would be going into a public/private sector partnership.
This, he said, was being done “to draw out of our private sector the best and the brightest and the
most competent, and to give them all of the encouragement and impetus to bring Barbados’ tourism product along with them under their careful
guidance and leadership”.
Speaking during the official reopening of the Sunbury Plantation Great House last Friday, Mr.Symmonds explained that from next year, Government would seek to withdraw from doing the things it was historically known to do for tourism and rely more on the private sector and individuals to use their initiative, capital, connections, and influence to help build out Barbados’ tourism product.
“We ask you to reflect on how best you can contribute in this partnership.
It is not a partnership in the traditional sense; it is a partnership that is about Barbadians and friends of Barbados working towards making the key commercial effort in Barbados the best effort that Barbados can offer the world,” the Minister pointed out.
He added that the public/private partnerships would be characterized by initiatives similar to that of the reopening of the Sunbury Plantation Great House.
The Tourism Minister noted that there were several other players in the country who had put a lot of effort into building out their own areas of activity.
“I ask you to think about this – whether you are into manufacturing; whether you
are into the commercial/retail sector; whether you are into the hard concrete construction sector; you must remember that those sectors take place in jurisdiction Barbados.
“And jurisdiction Barbados is ever relying on tourism, and tourism therefore is indirectly or directly, depending on what you do, relying on your sector of activity.
All we will be asking in a public/private partnership as we go forward is for you to reflect on how your sector can help serve to build out the destination Barbados in a better way and how destination Barbados’ tourism interest can be enhanced in some way
by partnering directly or indirectly with the sector that you are interested in,” Mr. Symmonds said.
He stressed that without exception every sector of commercial activity in Barbados impacted the island’s tourism product.
( JRB /BGIS )
BARBADOS/OAS AGREEMENT TO SAFEGUARD HERITAGE
Barbados entered into a Cooperative Working Agreement with the Organization of American States (OAS) on December 3, to identify all of the country’s land, marine and underwater heritage assets.
This was disclosed by Minister of Tourism and International Transport, Kerrie
Symmonds, as he addressed the reopening of the Sunbury Plantation Great House,
last Friday.
That arrangement, he said, would allow Barbados to identify its heritage assets
and list and safeguard them in the form of a national register of assets
“The fact of the matter is that as we live in a jurisdiction that is threatened by
hurricanes every year, increasingly threatened by earthquakes, and, increasingly,
threats of volcanic eruptions at sea are likely to cause a tidal wave, we have to think in
terms of how we protect and treasure our historical assets and also be able to
replicate them in the event that such a need arises,” he explained.
And, he noted that Barbados was able to partner with the OAS through the
Ministry of Culture to enter an agreement, for which the framework is already set and
the necessary funding in place.
“We are in position to know and to catalogue and safeguard those assets
wherever they may be found,” he stated.
Describing the Sunbury Plantation House as one of Barbados’ historical treasures, the Minister noted that it was built in 1660, is now 358 years old and features a 28-
seater mahogany dining table that is 270 years old.
“It is a treasure that appeals in a significant way to the market in Europe where people spend large amounts of money going to Germany, England, [and] France, to
experience heritage trails; to experience the museum pieces ; to experience the
antiquity of Europe; and here we are in Barbados offering to Europe a tourism product
that can stand as an equal to virtually anything that they have over there.
And that is not to overstate the case, ” he said.
The Minister stressed that from 2019, Barbados’ tourism product was going to be characterized by the ownership of, and telling the story about the rum industry in
Barbados.
“We want every visitor who comes to this country to recognize that in the same way you can’t go to Florida without hearing about Mickey Mouse, you can’t come to Barbados without hearing about rum; in the same way you can’t go to England without hearing about the Westminster system of government; you must not be able to come to Barbados without experiencing the story and the history and the heritage and all of the antiquity associated with the rum industry,” he stated.
Mr. Symmonds called on stakeholders to embrace those things which were
unique to Barbados’ history, as they form part of the heritage tourism effort.
(JRB/BGIS)
Friday 14th December 2018 - Sunbury Plantation House, Sunbury, St.Philip, Barbados SUNBURY PLANTATION GREAT HOUSE REOPENS.