Post a Comment Print Share on Facebook

Bourges designated European Capital of Culture 2028

Bourges will become the European Capital of Culture in 2028, announced Wednesday Rossella Tarantino, president of the jury responsible for deciding between the four French cities in the running, including Rouen, Montpellier and Clermont-Ferrand, which saw their hopes disappointed.

- 1 reads.

Bourges designated European Capital of Culture 2028

Bourges will become the European Capital of Culture in 2028, announced Wednesday Rossella Tarantino, president of the jury responsible for deciding between the four French cities in the running, including Rouen, Montpellier and Clermont-Ferrand, which saw their hopes disappointed. It is a “huge honor”, ​​reacted the PS mayor of Bourges, Yann Galut, present at the Ministry of Culture for this announcement greeted by cries of joy. “In this candidacy, we were somehow the little thumb in front of the metropolises, we tried to offer another vision and another way of experiencing our European capital of culture,” he declared, highlighting a “candidacy for sobriety”.

As every year, the chosen French city will share this title, which raises hopes of significant economic and tourist benefits, with other localities: Ceské Budejovice in the Czech Republic and Skopje in North Macedonia have already been named for 2028.

“Choosing Bourges means supporting the challenge of a medium-sized city (64,000 inhabitants, editor’s note) which focuses on culture for its human, social and economic development and which aims to make a real place for all audiences”, underlined the Minister of Culture, Rima Abdul Malak.

Bourges had campaigned by presenting itself as the standard bearer of medium-sized towns. His project wants to use culture as a lever for social, economic, ecological and tourist acceleration, in a city already marked by the success of its Printemps, a major contemporary music festival.

Launched in 1985 under the leadership of France and Greece, the European Capital of Culture system aims to stimulate cultural tourism, with the organization of exhibitions, festivals, and even the construction of museums. Bourges will succeed Paris in 1989, Avignon in 2000, Lille in 2004 and Marseille in 2013.

A designation as European Capital of Culture often implies high expectations, both in terms of attendance and longer-term attractiveness, and a high budget.

In 2013, Marseille welcomed 11 million visitors, for a total budget of more than a billion euros and benefits estimated at 500 million euros. The construction of the Mucem, which attracts 1 million visitors each year, was completed during the event.

Avatar
Your Name
Post a Comment
Characters Left:
Your comment has been forwarded to the administrator for approval.×
Warning! Will constitute a criminal offense, illegal, threatening, offensive, insulting and swearing, derogatory, defamatory, vulgar, pornographic, indecent, personality rights, damaging or similar nature in the nature of all kinds of financial content, legal, criminal and administrative responsibility for the content of the sender member / members are belong.