Sport Northern Ireland

Sport Northern Ireland

Sport Northern Ireland logo
Abbreviation Sport NI
Motto The leading public body for the development of sport in Northern Ireland
Formation December 31, 1973 (1973-12-31)
Type NGO
Purpose Development of sport in Northern Ireland
Headquarters House Of Sport
Location
  • 2a Upper Malone Road, Belfast, County Antrim, BT9 5LA
Region served
Northern Ireland
Chief Executive
Antoinette McKeown
Main organ
Board of Sport NI (Chairman - Brian Henning)
Parent organization
Department for Communities
Affiliations UK Sport, UK Anti-Doping, The National Lottery
Budget
£31,304,000 (2011-12)
Staff
83
Website Sport NI
Formerly called
Sports Council of Northern Ireland

Sport Northern Ireland is the regional government sports council (funding body) for Northern Ireland.

History

Sport NI HQ

It was established under the Recreation and Youth Service (Northern Ireland) Order 1973[1] as the Sports Council for Northern Ireland, with its purpose defined by Article 3 of the Recreation and Youth Service (Northern Ireland) Order 1986.[2] Another organisation, the Youth and Sports Council for Northern Ireland, had been established by the Youth Welfare, Physical Training and Recreation Act of 1962.

From 2006, it organised Northern Ireland's involvement in the UK School Games.

It has recently contributed £7m to the building of Northern Ireland's first 50m swimming pool, for North Down Borough Council, approved in September 2009,[3] being built by Farrans (Construction) (owned by CRH plc).[4]

Structure

Closer view of The House of Sport

Its head office is based at the Malone Roundabout of the A55 and B103, near Barnett Demesne.

Funding

It receives around £7m a year from the National Lottery; the rest comes from the taxpayer.

Centres

It has a national outdoor training centre, the Tollymore National Outdoor Centre, at the base of the Mourne Mountains. This is a training base for mountaineering and canoeing. It was built in 1970.

At the Jordanstown campus (former Jordanstown Polytechnic) of the University of Ulster, it has the Sports Institute for Northern Ireland. This was created in 2002.

See also

References

Video clips

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/28/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.