Eden Project in Cornwall returns to trading surplus
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-cornwall-27835276 Version 0 of 1. Bosses at Cornwall's Eden Project are hoping they have turned a corner with the attraction back in the black after its worst-ever year. Eden has told staff its new accounts, soon to be filed to Companies House, showed a trading surplus of just over £2m for the year to the end of March. That compares with a loss of about £1.4m a year previously. Visitor numbers have also increased, according to a spokesman for the project. He said visitors for the first five months were "a couple of percent" higher than a year before, despite poor weather in the early part of 2014 and negative headlines about the Dawlish rail collapse, which cut off trains to Cornwall. Eden, with its huge dome-shaped greenhouses, opened in 2001. In its first 10 years, it welcomed more than 13 million people. But 2013 saw only 858,000 visitors - its lowest ever. There has also been a focus on cost cutting with 68 staff redundancies during 2013/14. One encouraging sign now is that spend per head by visitors has risen. Plans for the year ahead include a youth hostel on the site. Finance director David Harland said: "These results show that Eden has turned the corner after a difficult year in which we had to make some very hard decisions. "We have lost valuable staff in a painful restructure process but by cutting costs across the board we have ensured that the project is now on a very sound footing." |