Pitch where George Best started out to be protected 'in perpetuity'
The football pitch where George Best first kicked a ball is to be protected forever, Belfast City Council said.
Cregagh Green is the spot in the centre of a housing estate in the east of the city where Best's talent first flourished as a schoolboy in the 1950s.
He was a prodigy who went on to become one of the world's greatest footballers of all time, a marauding presence with Manchester United and the Northern Ireland international team.
Organisers at the Green have been awarded £5,000 by the London Marathon Charitable Trust (LMCT) to help promote physical activity and community participation.
Best inspired the Old Trafford outfit to win league titles and the European Cup while still a young player.
But his career at United was cut short following a battle with alcohol, the pressures of stardom and global fame.
Cregagh Green is the first project in the UK to be awarded funding by the LMCT as part of The Active Spaces Forever programme, delivered in partnership with Fields in Trust to protect and activate outdoor recreation spaces.
The open space will now be protected "in perpetuity" through a legal deed of dedication between Belfast City Council and Fields in Trust.
Councillor Adam Newton of Belfast City Council said:
Since 1981, The London Marathon Charitable Trust has funded a huge range of projects which have inspired millions of people to get active.
It said Cregagh Green had become the first in the long list of inspiring projects which will be permanently protected through funding from The Trust enabling local people to enjoy the benefits of physical activity into the future.