Sport Northern Ireland


Sport Northern Ireland, officially the Sports Council for Northern Ireland, is the regional government sports council for Northern Ireland. Its head office is based, near Barnett Demesne, at the "House of Sport" on Upper Malone Road in Belfast. It receives some funding from the taxpayer, with funding also coming from the National Lottery.

History

The organisation was established under the Recreation and Youth Service Order 1973, with its purpose defined by Article 3 of the Recreation and Youth Service Order 1986. Another organisation, the Youth and Sports Council for Northern Ireland, had been established by the Youth Welfare, Physical Training and Recreation Act of 1962.
The organisation, which is also known as Sport NI, was responsible Northern Ireland's involvement in the UK School Games from 2006 onwards. Sport NI was involved in the building of Northern Ireland's first Olympic-size swimming pool. The Bangor Aurora Aquatic and Leisure Complex opened in 2013.
In 2015, a number of members of the organisation's board resigned, following the publication of a report into issues with the "leadership, management and the overall culture" of Sport NI. The organisation's chairperson and vice-chair also stepped down.
In early 2021, Sport NI oversaw the disbursement of over £22m in funding to sports bodies in the region, including the GAA Ulster Council, Irish Football Association, Golf Ireland and IRFU Ulster Branch, to "support sporting bodies through the pandemic". This program was later described as "flawed" with the Northern Ireland Audit Office questioning why over £1.5m was given to the Royal County Down Golf Club - when the club already had a "very significant bank balance and a high level of reserves".
A BBC news article, dated January 2024, noted that the organisation's CEO was absent from the post, with the former Olympic rower Richard Archibald then acting as "interim CEO".

Facilities

The Sports Institute for Northern Ireland, with facilities at Ulster University's Jordanstown campus, was established as a partnership between Sport NI and Ulster University. It was formed in 2002 to create a "high performance sporting system" in Northern Ireland. Primarily based at UUJ, the institute has also operated separate 'Performance Development Centres' in Bangor, Belfast, Cookstown and Lisburn. SINI's services include performance planning, sport medicine, physiotherapy, performance analysis and advice.
Sport NI also operates a national outdoor training centre, the Tollymore National Outdoor Centre, near Tollymore Forest Park at the base of the Mourne Mountains. This facility, used as a training base for mountaineering and canoeing, was built in 1970.