National Holocaust Memorial Centre and Learning Service

(asked on 20th March 2017) - View Source

Question to the Department for Levelling Up, Housing & Communities:

To ask the Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government, what estimate the Government has made of how many people will on average visit the National Holocaust Memorial and Learning Centre each week in its first year of opening.


Answered by
Marcus Jones Portrait
Marcus Jones
Treasurer of HM Household (Deputy Chief Whip, House of Commons)
This question was answered on 23rd March 2017

Victoria Tower Gardens was recommended to Government as the most fitting site for the new national memorial to the Holocaust and co-located education centre by the cross-party Holocaust Memorial Foundation after a search of almost 50 sites across London.

The design competition – which includes many of the biggest names in the world – deliberately allows a process whereby the winning team can evolve their design in the light of public feedback, including from local residents. The final design will, of course, be subject to all the usual planning approvals.

Westminster already has a high tourist footfall and the Government hopes that people will be encouraged to go to the memorial as part of their visit. However, there will be full and comprehensive transport and people flow management developed as part of the plans.

It is right that Britain should have a fitting Memorial to the Holocaust together with an accompanying education centre to act as a voice against hatred in the modern world. And there is no more fitting place for such a bold statement of our values than next to Parliament at the heart of our democracy.

We have made a promise to Britain’s Holocaust survivors that we will do this – and we are going to keep that promise.

Reticulating Splines