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Minister Lyons launches Defence Heritage Record for Northern Ireland

Communities Minister Gordon Lyons at the barrage balloon anchors on the Stormont Estate, one of the 4,500 sites recorded as part of the two-year survey into Northern Ireland's defence heritage.

Communities Minister Gordon Lyons at the barrage balloon anchors on the Stormont Estate, one of the 4,500 sites recorded as part of the two-year survey into Northern Ireland's defence heritage.


Communities Minister Gordon Lyons has welcomed the launch of a new Defence Heritage Record, a comprehensive resource detailing over 4,500 sites constructed across Northern Ireland in response to the World War One and Two as well as the Cold War.


The Historic Environment Record of Northern Ireland (HERoNI) within the Department for Communities (DfC) has spent the last two years carrying out intensive field research to identify and record the sites. The launch comes shortly after Armistice Day and the new resource is a fitting reminder of Northern Ireland’s place in 20th century global events which shaped history.



Minister Lyons says the resource will be of immense interest to academics, researchers and any members of the public keen to learn more about our history from this era. 


Communities Minister Gordon Lyons at the barrage balloon anchors on the Stormont Estate, one of the 4,500 sites recorded as part of the two-year survey into Northern Ireland's defence heritage.

Minister Lyons commented:


“Dotted around our countryside and coast are sites we pass every day, often unaware of their significance.  From the search lights on the Belfast to Bangor coastal path to the pill boxes on the North Coast, or the airfields hidden in our landscape, these sites are important heritage assets which tell the story of Northern Ireland’s vital contribution to these conflicts.



“This new record is an important historical resource which has recorded these sites for posterity as some may be vulnerable to decay or destruction.  The work has also identified some of the most important, rare and best-preserved sites as warranting statutory protection as Scheduled Historic Monuments or listed buildings, ensuring their longer-term survival.”


The Defence Heritage Record is fully accessible to everyone through DfC’s online Historic Environment Map viewer here.


The Department is also launching an information guide, to provide background information and explain the features found within the Record. This can be found at here



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