20 NI brides lose dresses in Cathedral Buildings fire

Watch more of our videos on Shots! 
and live on Freeview channel 276
Visit Shots! now
Crowdfunding campaign to help the tenants of Cathedral Buildings get back on their feet

Around 20 brides-to-be have had their wedding plans shattered after their wedding dresses were caught in the Cathedral Buildings fire in Belfast last Monday.

They are among hundreds of pieces of clothing and processions which went up in flames at Perfect Fit, a dressmaking company based on the ground floor.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Seamstress Hazel Alderdice, owner of Perfect Fit, is not only dealing with the stress of losing her business and the customers it has affected - she's also eight months pregnant.

She said: “I've been growing this business for 15 years. I've lost everything that I've accumulated over that time - years of making patterns , buying technical pattern books, buying specialist machinery, mannequins, fabric, thread - every little tool in a dressmaker's arsenal.“Yesterday I had to go out and buy myself a needle and thread. I was completely broken.

“But the worst thing? 20 brides have lost their wedding dresses. Possibly the most significant piece of clothing they will own in their lifetime, chosen with the greatest of care, now gone. Their weddings are fast approaching and their options are running out. My heart bleeds for all of them.”

Throughout the building 14 businesses and organisations including culture, arts and voluntary spaces watched on Monday, October 3 as over 50 firefighters and eight fire trucks brought the blaze under control on Donegal Street.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Around 40 people who worked in the building have also been left displaced and concerned about the future.

Chiho Tang, lead creative at Oranga, a graphic design agency in the building, explained: “Waking up to the news on Monday was an absolute shock.“Not only do I have the majority of nearly a decade of my portfolio in that building but all our tech equipment was very recently replaced with very high spec machines. My staff are devastated by this.

“I had hoped to attempt a recovery of our server as we have client work on it spanning the last nine or 10 years.

“We have had to spend the last week redrawing artwork for clients. It’s all so surreal. We’ve been there five years and worked hard on creating a great space to work in and welcome clients to. Really difficult to take in to be honest.”

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Media and marketing company Excalibur Press were among the affected businesses. They employ eight staff and had four offices, one of which was a newly set up photography and videography studio.

Owner Tina Calder, continued: “I can’t even begin to articulate how I feel. Although it’s no comfort saying it, many of the tangible assets will be able to be replaced in time. However, what I cannot replace is 27 years of journalism and media history. I’ve hard copy clippings of every single story I’ve ever written, every publication I worked on and edited. Literally everything I have achieved in my career is evidenced in that building.

“I have gone from crying inconsolably to trying to be practical and working on our rebuild all week. But it’s exhausting. Emotions are high, everyone has lost so much.

“I keep thinking of silly little things like our little mascot Sir Lancelot the purple dragon we would take to events and stuff. I went to replace him the other day as a sign of us rebuilding only to find out he’s a collectors item worth hundreds of pounds.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“My staff are devastated. We lost a huge amount of technical equipment. 14 MACs, camera and studio equipment, radio equipment and more.

The scene on Donegal Street in Belfast City Centre where firefighters are tacking a blaze at the Cathedral BuildingsThe scene on Donegal Street in Belfast City Centre where firefighters are tacking a blaze at the Cathedral Buildings
The scene on Donegal Street in Belfast City Centre where firefighters are tacking a blaze at the Cathedral Buildings

“Our offices were also home to Merlin Arts CIC, NI Festival of Writing, BAM magazine and Belfast 247 radio station. Everything of theirs is gone too.

“Despite being able to see our things seemingly untouched by fire through windows we have been told we’re not going to be given access to the building to conduct a salvage operation. It is gut wrenching.”

Heartbroken Paul Kelly, design director at Form Native, a brand and digital design studio had to watch his practice of 20 years disappear: “The fire at Cathedral Buildings has profoundly impacted my business. Design is all about communication, bringing different things together to create something new, exciting, compelling.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“That’s what we had in Cathedral Buildings, a mixture of people, experiences, skills and attitudes that make working in the city rewarding.“My studio held the physical library and archive of 20 years' practice – the irreplaceable things that nourish your creativity and give you a working home. Like so many others we are heartbroken to lose that. Now we want to work hard not to lose our community as well.

“I am deeply grateful that no lives were lost and now aware that we want space where we are not just surviving but able to thrive again.“I want this to be another opportunity for us collectively to think about what a city is and who it is for – liveable and alive for everyone.”

A crowdfunding campaign has now been set up to support each of the tenants in the building who all have differing needs but who are committed to working together to develop a new hub of creativity within the heart of arts and culture in the Cathedral Quarter. Already nearly £4,000 has been raised.

A now destroyed Cathedral BuildingsA now destroyed Cathedral Buildings
A now destroyed Cathedral Buildings

Declan Murphy, accountant and musician who was based on the first floor, added: “I have lost equipment and some sentimental items in the fire but the greatest loss is losing the presence in the Cathedral Quarter.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“An exciting and vibrant part of the city and a building that contained a friendly and eclectic mix of people and businesses.

“The strength of character of tenants is evident in our resolve to bounce back, hopefully finding space in the immediate area of the Cathedral Quarter.”

Related topics: