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Tuesday, 13th May 2008

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Tourism drive builds on Code



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ROSSLYN CHAPEL'S Da Vinci Code connection is to be highlighted in a new drive to attract tourists to Midlothian.
In a plan to boost the local economy by attracting as many visitors as possible to the region, an action plan has been put to councillors.

And it is hoped that the chapel made famous by Dan Brown's book and the subsequent blockbuster movie can be a catalyst to boost tourism in the rest of Midlothian. Proposed actions include increasing information about the area, expanding into the business and conference market, improving promotion of events such as fairs and festivals, and upgrading and creating more local accommodation.



The full article contains 111 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
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1

Explorer,

longniddry 15/01/2008 14:27:25
This is great news, and not before time. I don't think it was helpful to close the Tourist Information Centre at Old Craighall, nor the one at Penicuik and transfer them both to the Brunton Hall in Musselburgh. I don't believe that Midlothian is today well served by VisitScotland based in Edinburgh. A sensible step would be to put the TIC beside Rosslyn Chapel and so give a real boost to what was for long a forgotten county. Midlothian used to run from the Pentlands in the west to Soutra in the east and also included Edinburgh, where the former Midlothian County buildings still stand across the road from the statue of David Hume on the Royal Mile. Read 'Rosslyn Chapel Revealed' (Sutton Publishing Ltd., Nov 2007) for a complete survey of Rosslyn Chapel, Rosslyn Castle, Roslin Glen, Temple village, Soutra Aisle and Rosewell and all the many other glorious (but unnoticed) points of historic interest and beauty in Midlothian - especially the marvellous Local Studies archive and library at Loanhead!

 

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