A heritage group has voiced its "outrage" at the demolition of three historic buildings in Belfast.

The buildings at 95-107 North Street, Belfast which date back more than 100 years were demolished over the weekend.

The Ulster Architectural Heritage Society expected a request for the buildings to be listed which is sent on March 11, 2016 to be approved by Belfast City Council in their December meeting.

The heritage group said it was "alarming" that demolition took place "coincidentally, just before listing for the protection of these buildings was likely to be confirmed".

It said: "This follows on the destruction of heritage through the demolition of the Metropole and Orpheus buildings on York Street in 2015, and comes at a time when a substantial section of historic Belfast at the other end of North Street is re-proposed for demolition as part of plans for the Royal Exchange commercial complex. The destruction of our finite and irreplaceable historic building stock is now at shocking levels.

"We are unnecessarily losing historic buildings in Belfast which any other city or jurisdiction would give priority to preserve, in a city that has ample vacant development land. Every heritage asset lost represents another blow to Belfast’s potential to promote tourism, economic investment, social regeneration and cohesion through restoration of its historic buildings. New developments should incorporate and compliment the City's heritage assets, not obliterate them. "

The group are now seeking an urgent meeting with Communities Minister Paul Givan.

It said: "Unfortunately the positive and progressive attitude adopted by the Minister appears to be less widely reflected among local councillors in Northern Ireland. Urgent reassessment of the approach to the practical protection of historic buildings must be addressed, not only in North Belfast but across Northern Ireland.

"Following the weekend demolition yet another significant portion of our attractive architectural past has been destroyed. As North Belfast’s heritage, building by building reduces to a pile of broken bricks, and photographs in a forgotten file, future generations and visitors are denied the experience of the original Belfast."

Belfast Telegraph