GROUND-BREAKING RESEARCH HAS FOUND THAT HOSTING THE EUROVISION SONG CONTEST 2023 DELIVERED A £54 MILLION ECONOMIC BOOST TO THE LIVERPOOL CITY REGION.
In a first for any Eurovision Song Contest host city, a Multi-Agency Evaluation Steering Group led by Liverpool City Council has commissioned five in-depth, independent evaluations – the interim results of which will be announced today (Thursday 26 October) by the Leader of Liverpool City Council, Councillor Liam Robinson and Liverpool City Region Mayor, Steve Rotheram.
The reports looked at the economic and social impact of staging the event on behalf of Ukraine, as well as the influence on cultural relations; the impact on well-being in the city and the wider city region; the visitor experience and the effectiveness of the strategic collaboration between delivery agencies.
Key data highlights include:
The Big Numbers
– Eurovision boosted the Liverpool City Region economy by £54.8million (net) with restaurants, accommodation providers, shops, bars and transport networks all benefitting.
– In total 473,000 people attended Eurovision events in the city, with 306,000 additional visitors heading to Liverpool to be part of the celebrations.
– In May, 175,000 city centre hotel rooms were sold – the best month on record since 2018. (STEAM data)
Culture Counts
– The education and community programmes, EuroStreet and EuroLearn, engaged with 367 organisations and directly with 50,000 people, young and old. The overall programme is estimated to have reached 2 million people.
– EuroFestival – the Culture Liverpool curated a two-week culture festival – presented 24 brand new commissions, 19 of which were in collaboration with Ukrainian artists. A huge 328,346 people engaged with this programme – 557 artists, 1,750 participants involved in a commission and an audience number of 326,039.
– The official Eurovision Village, located at the Pier Head attracted 250,000 visitors across the ten days it was open, with the ticketed final selling out within hours.