16th January – Give your views on Summer Events in the Park

This Monday 16th January is your chance to give feedback to Lambeth Council and the event organisers of this summer’s major event series in Brockwell Park (26th May – 11th June). There are two sessions:

Half Moon pub in Herne Hill, SE24 9HU 14:00 – 16:00
High Trees Community Development Trust in Tulse Hill, SW2 2NS 18.00 – 20.00

Although the events are fixed for this summer, people are being asked for their views so that the organisers may incorporate them in the planning. For more information email the Brockwell Live Community Live team email them at community@brockwell-live.com or look at their website: brockwell-live.com/community.

Friends of Brockwell Park (FOBP) welcomes the decision to include the Lambeth Country Show (June10th/11th) in the main event series, shortening the closure of  a large area of the park. FOBP remains opposed to large walled paying events in Brockwell Park.

Highlights from our last committee meeting

If you’re wondering what Friends of Brockwell Park are up to right now, here are some of the things we discussed at our last meeting. Please join in the discussion by posting your comments below:

1. Noshir Patel (Secretary) and Laura Morland (FOBP Parks Liaison) attended the Lambeth Parks Forum meeting at the Town Hall on November 13, which discussed the shape of the Council’s future events policy. We have many questions arising from the above, particularly Lambeth’s favouring the option of the existing policy with a few tweaks.

2. We will hold an extraordinary Committee Meeting on December 4 in order to formulate a response for presentation to the Lambeth Parks Events Strategy consultation, beginning in January 2019. This response will incorporate both FOBP’s questions arising from the presentations at the November 13 meeting, and FOBP’s views on future events in Brockwell Park.

3. We expressed our strong opposition to the Council’s intention to allow commercial hoardings within Brockwell Park, as being a commercial intrusion in a precious public space that most people desire should be free of such things.

4. The ruined tarmac on the path between Brockwell Hall and the meadow to the North has still not been repaired. This is part of the still-unrestored damage caused by ‘FieldDay/Mighty Hoopla’ in June this year.

How was Field Day for you?

As the curtain is about to come down on Field Day and Mighty Hoopla in Brockwell Park (1 to 3 June), we’d love your views on the weekend. How was it for you? Did you experience more or less disruption than anticipated? Would you say never again or happy to see the festival reappear next year? Were the noise levels OK or not so much? Have you seen damage to the park or nothing to report? Please tell us all your thoughts in the comments below and we will use them in our analysis of the weekend and its impact – at whatever level – on the park and the neighbourhood.

The events ran from 1 to 3 June in Brockwell Park.

 

 

Field Day and Lovebox

Friends of Brockwell Park has from the outset opposed the applications by Field Day/The Mighty Hoopla (1-3 June) and Lovebox/Citadel (13-15 July) to hold major events in Brockwell Park this summer, on the grounds that their size (up to 40,000 a day for three days, taking from a third to a fifth of the park for weeks at a time) was grossly disproportionate for a small, hilly urban park such as Brockwell.
So it was good news on 31 January that Lovebox/Citadel had decided to withdraw its application and move to Gunnersbury Park in Ealing. But on the same day, Field Day/The Mighty Hoopla announced it had received permission from Lambeth Council to go ahead with its major event in June half term, a time particularly precious for local families.
Cllr Sonia Winifred, Cabinet Member for Equalities and Culture, said: ‘We have engaged with residents, local businesses and other parties. Based on the resulting evaluation we have determined that two new major commercial events and the Lambeth Country Show this summer would be excessive.’
FOBP looks forward to seeing the evaluation on which Cllr Winifred has based her decision. We know thousands of people opposed both events; perhaps thousands of people we don’t know about supported them and Lambeth is playing the honest referee between them. If not, it looks as if Lambeth Council is plain ignoring local residents and going after the half million pounds it has been promised by Field Day/The Mighty Hoopla. It is interesting that, contrary to its own events strategy, Lambeth has ‘determined that two new major commercial events and the Lambeth Country Show this summer would be excessive’. It looks as if Lambeth is dressing up the withdrawal of Lovebox/Citadel as a worthy decision by Lambeth rather than a clever commercial move by Lovebox/Citadel to cut its losses and seek pastures new.
Friends of Brockwell Park believe this is a deplorable decision that will do real harm to the park and its supportive surrounding communities.