A "chocolate experience" to be housed in a building inspired by foil chocolate wrappers has been approved by Glenorchy City Council's planning authority.The $150 million proposal, which includes a chocolate lab, chocolate lounge, emporium and tasting opportunities, would be built at the Cadbury factory site in Claremont, Hobart's northern suburbs."The chocolate experience will undoubtedly be a major tourism drawcard, generating economic activity during both construction and through increased visitor numbers in the longer term," Glenorchy Mayor Sue Hickey said.Factory tours, which had been a popular visitor drawcard, were stopped at Cadbury in 2008 following changes to health and safety laws.Cadbury's parent company, Mondelez International, closed the factory's visitor centre in 2015.Councillor Hickey said she was looking forward to visiting the new attraction."Everybody will be All the locals will be queuing up … it's going to be of international significance," she said.The developers behind the chocolate experience proposal, Simon Currant & Associates, have said the proposal "will bring back to life one of Tasmania's most beloved attractions: the Cadbury factory site at Claremont".The team anticipate the chocolate experience will attract more than 430,000 visitors per year."From the moment visitors arrive, this will be unlike any chocolate attraction in the world," Simon Currant said."It will be an innovative, immersive and deeply emotive experience that uses storytelling and technology to bring the magic of chocolate-making to life."It will be full of surprise, nostalgia, creativity and joy and, of course, there will be plenty of chocolate along the way