Fans of Seamus Heaney — and he has many in Boston and beyond — will be pleased to know that a major new arts and literary venue dedicated to the Nobel laureate is set to open in Northern Ireland Sept. 30. Called HomePlace, the new center is located in the village of Bellaghy, where Heaney, who taught at Harvard for more than two decades, was raised. It’s also where Heaney, who died in 2013, is buried. The Mid Ulster District Council, which built and owns HomePlace, collaborated with the poet’s family, including wife Marie and their children Michael, Christopher, and Catherine Ann. The venue includes a permanent exhibition focused on Heaney’s life and literature that’s filled with personal effects, family photos, video testimonials from friends, neighbors, world leaders, and fellow writers, and a performing arts space, classrooms, and a cafe. Last year, Harvard honored Heaney by turning his two-bedroom apartment at Adams House into the Heaney Suite, a space for students to quietly write or reflect.