A County Antrim firm has just completed an ambitious interior fit-out of a new permanent exhibition at Belfast Harbour offices which commemorates the city's 400 year old maritime history.
Marcon Fit-Out, in partnership with local design company Tandem, has brought the vision of the exhibition 'A Port that Built A City' to reality in four weeks thanks to its team's skillset which includes specialist joinery and manufacturing.
The high profile new heritage space details Belfast's emergence as a major port and the city's subsequent growth and development as an industrial hub, right up until the shipbuilding heyday of Harland & Wolff.
Marcon was responsible for the entire refurbishment of the new Heritage Room which required specialist joinery skills to house valuable historic documents and artefacts which relate to the port of Belfast's rich heritage. The famous Titanic table, which is on loan to Belfast Harbour from Harland & Wolff, and a stunning new 3.5 m high stained glass window by a local artist, Ann Smith will form centrepieces of the exhibition.
There is also an innovative installation featuring famous past chairmen of Belfast Harbour such as William Pirrie (1847-1858) who opened the Victoria Channel and laid the basis for the development of the modern port, and Robert Thompson (1907-1918) who oversaw the Harbour's investment in dry docks which allowed the city to become the world's biggest shipbuilder.
Len O'Hagan, Belfast Harbour's Chairman, said: "It is significant that a local fit-out contractor and local design team have provided the expertise needed to create the Heritage Room at an exhibition which is a celebration of Belfast's 400 year old maritime history. Belfast led the world with its craftsmanship in the field of industry and the new exhibition will be a permanent showcase of that history and a reminder that this is a maritime city where the tradition of high quality craftsmanship continues in a new age."
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