Intrusive Events – FOBP on BBC twice

  • Mighty Hoopla weekend just finished 3rd – 4th June 2023
  • Lambeth Country Show this weekend June 10–11
  • Pokemon Go event scheduled Friday August 4th to Sunday 6th

Events in Brockwell Park seem over the top and have received more attention than usual.

Friends of Brockwell Park chair, Peter Bradley, was in the thick of it, with two BBC interviews, one on TV one on radio.

He was on BBC London TV, broadcast both lunchtime and at 18.30, on Tuesday 6 June; and at 07.15 on BBC Radio London, on Shay Kaur-Grewel’s show, Wednesday 7 June (both available on BBC iPlayer).

In both interviews, Peter spoke of the intrusiveness of such events into the normal peaceful enjoyment of the park, by humans and wildlife. He also accused Lambeth Council of a breach of faith, with its decision to run the Pokemon major event, where it had promised that no more would be held outside the May–June timescale (see previous blog on this, FOBP Press Release).

For the BBC TV interview with Luxmy Gopal, Peter invited her and her cameraman into his flat, 13 floors up, facing the park, where the journalists could hear the noise from Mighty Hoopla first hand and commented ‘you can feel the whole room vibrating’.

Local businesses lose out.

In both interviews, Peter challenged the council’s assertion that such events brought in money for local businesses, saying that the council had no local evidence to support its assertion.  FOBP has surveyed local businesses after each event for many years, and 80% of 80+ respondents said they either lost money, or their takings stayed the same.










	

Friends of Brockwell Park objection to Pokémon Go major event in Brockwell Park

Friends of Brockwell Park (FOBP) strongly objects to the proposal to hold a three-day Pokémon Go major event in Brockwell Park this August 2023, for these reasons:

  • It constitutes a further unacceptable large-scale intrusion onto a critical public facility
  • It is in the middle of a period that had been set aside by agreement with the Council for the uninterrupted enjoyment of the facility by park users
  • It represents the unavoidable and significant detriment of that park user enjoyment both in the three days of the event, and the nine-day build-up
  • It will lead to the significant disfiguring of the park itself both in that period and long term, by vehicles and heavy machinery required to install disfiguring structures and installations and by the additional projected footfall of at least 60,000 people in three days. This will be compounded if it occurs in a period of bad weather
  • Last but not least, it is a gross breach of the undertaking Lambeth Council gave to the Brockwell Park Community Partners (BPCP) and to the FOBP that major events, including the Lambeth Country Show, would be restricted to the May–June period.

FOBP fully endorses the recent BPCP statement about the Pokémon Go event. It is fair and measured.

FOBP has also received the briefing sent to Councillors by Lambeth’s Events Team. We find this briefing unworthy of public servants:

  • First, the Events Team claims that Pokémon Go is a ‘large’, rather than a ‘major’ event. ‘A major event is defined under Lambeth’s Event Policy as having a capacity over 20,000. This event has a capacity of 9999 and is defined by the policy as a large event,’ the Events Team claims. But this is semantics from the Events Team: there are two 9999-strong sessions per day for each of the three days, making each day an actual capacity of 19,998. This is indeed a major event in Lambeth terms, and therefore a gross breach of the agreement with park user groups
  • FOBP is opposed to walled, paid-for events in Brockwell Park, but at least they verify and control the numbers attending. There is no means of controlling the numbers, or timing, of attendees of the Pokémon Go event
  • There is still no detailed plan of where it will be located in the Park
  • The amount the Park will receive from the ‘PIL’ (Park Investment Levy)—£20,000—is derisory
  • The Events Team claims ‘there are substantial independent reports showing the economic benefit that these events have brought to local areas and businesses’. FOBP challenges the Events Team to produce one such report that supports this for the traders around Brockwell Park. Councillors will be aware that repeated surveys by FOBP show that most local businesses experience worse trading at the time of major events.

FOBP chair, Peter Bradley, said: ‘Park user groups such as FOBP and BPCP, reflecting the views of their members and many local people, have strong reservations about major, paid-for events in Brockwell Park. We thought we had an agreement with Lambeth Council at least to restrict major events to the May–June period. This Pokémon Go major event, shrouded in mystery, obfuscation and numbers games, rides roughshod over that agreement. It is an act of bad faith by Lambeth Council towards park users.’

Annual ‘Dawn Chorus’ Bird Walk

This year’s bird walk, organised by the Friends of Brockwell Park and the local RSPB group, took place on Sunday 23 April. The walk was led by Czech Conroy of the local RSPB, and some 27 people joined him. We saw 35 species of birds, with the highlights being watching mistle thrush chicks being fed on their nest in the oak near the Lido, a spotted woodpecker pecking on the fallen log by the exercise kit opposite the BMX track, and a cormorant eating loads of fish in front of us on the top pond.

Here is the full list of the species observed: Graylag Goose; Canada Goose; Mute Swan; Mallard; Tufted Duck; Rock Pigeon (Feral Pigeon); Stock Dove; Common Wood-Pigeon; Eurasian Moorhen; Eurasian Coot; Herring Gull; Great Cormorant; Gray Heron; Great Spotted Woodpecker; Rose-ringed Parakeet; Eurasian Jay; Eurasian Magpie; Eurasian Jackdaw; Carrion Crow; Eurasian Blue Tit; Great Tit; Common Chiffchaff; Long-tailed Tit; Eurasian Blackcap; Greater Whitethroat; Eurasian Wren; European Starling; Mistle Thrush; Eurasian Blackbird; European Robin; Dunnock; House Sparrow; Common Chaffinch; European Greenfinch; European Goldfinch.

By Peter Bradley and Czech Conroy. Photography by Ian Judson

PROPOSED BOUNDARY CHANGES TO BROCKWELL PARK CONSERVATION AREA

Friends of Brockwell Park join other local groups to call for the inclusion of Cressingham Gardens Estate in the Brockwell Park Conservation Area.
Here is our submission that was sent to Lambeth planning in early January with the joint declaration as an appendix:

To whomever it may concern,
We, the Friends of Brockwell Park, and other major local organisations argued in July 2015 that “For the future protection of Brockwell Park, we ask that consideration be given to the recommendation by English Heritage […] that the boundaries of the Brockwell Park Conservation Area should be extended to include the Cressingham Gardens Estate.” (See Appendix 1, below.) We reiterate this position even more forcefully today. We hold strongly that there is an unanswerable case that the Conservation Area must be extended to include the estate and we are extremely disappointed that the appraisal document does not include any consideration of this possibility.

The appraisal document notes in section 2.33 that Cressingham Gardens is an “understated brick-built estate […] carefully designed in the 1970s to respond to the setting of the park.” Section 2.34 states that the “main, communal landscaped space [of the estate] adjoins one of the park entrances and is included within the conservation area,” but then affirms without further comment that “the houses themselves are not within the conservation area.” Yet this section (2.34) itself begins with the key point: “As a result of the design the estate is largely invisible in views from within the landscape.”

We, the FoBP, contend that this inspired architecture is what must be protected: the low buildings of the estate are below the tree line when viewed from the park. It is a view which could so easily be constrained by a largescale development. Conservation Area status for the estate would help to mitigate the risk in the future of intrusive over-sized buildings and an unbroken line of large residential blocks. We speak for countless lovers of Brockwell Park who enjoy the park not simply on account of its green spaces but also owing to its inviting surrounding views: the Cressingham Gardens Estate deserves to be recognised officially as being fully part of the Brockwell Park conservation area.

APPENDIX 1
To: David Rose, Democratic Services Officer, London Borough of Lambeth

We understand that a report on options for the redevelopment of the Cressingham Gardens Estate will be presented to Cabinet on 13th July 2015.

As representatives of four local organisations who are committed to protect Brockwell Park and the vital amenity it provides for local communities, we request that the following statement be included with the papers circulated to members in advance of the Cabinet meeting.

Cabinet Meeting 13th July 2015: Agenda item: Building the Homes We Need to House the People of Lambeth – estate regeneration update.

The Cressingham Gardens Estate occupies a sensitive position on the highest point on the western boundary of Brockwell Park. The low rise buildings which comprise the estate and their orientation, at right angles to (rather than facing) the park boundary, ensure that the park’s skyline is not dominated by buildings and the proximity of urban development. Moreover, the green open spaces within the estate allow park users who approach the park from Tulse Hill to enjoy open, safe and inviting access to the park as they approach Cressingham Gate. We are concerned that these features should be preserved in any future development.

Therefore, if Cabinet is minded to agree to further work on any proposal to regenerate the estate, we request that Cabinet requires that work to include a full review of the impact of any proposed development on the amenity of the park and the enjoyment of users, including (but not exclusively) the views from the park towards the estate and access through the estate to the park and that the outcome of that consideration and review form part of the brief given to the project architects.

For the future protection of Brockwell Park, we ask that consideration be given to the recommendation by English Heritage in January 2014 that the boundaries of the Brockwell Park Conservation Area should be extended to include the Cressingham Gardens Estate.
We further request that Cabinet ensures that all future consultations about the regeneration of the estate include park users and local amenity groups, including the signatories to this statement.

This request is submitted by representatives from the following local organisations with an interest in the amenity and protection of Brockwell Park:
The Friends of Brockwell Park
The Brockwell Park Community Partners
The Herne Hill Society
The Brixton Society

Friends of Brockwell Park expresses concern over Extinction Rebellion campsite in Park

PRESS RELEASE, TUESDAY 1 SEPTEMBER 2020

Friends of Brockwell Park expresses concern over
Extinction Rebellion campsite in Park

 

The Friends of Brockwell Park (FOBP) has learned, at two days’ notice, that campaigning group Extinction Rebellion (XR) plans to use Brockwell Park, Lambeth, as a campsite for up to 200 tents for a fortnight from Bank Holiday Monday, 31 August 2020. FOBP was not consulted about the plan and does not support it. After XR used the park for a festival a year ago, XR promised it would not return to Brockwell Park.

 

The FOBP is particularly anxious about this large concentration of persons at close quarters for two weeks during the COVID-19 crisis, which could put XR campers and members of the public in contact with them, at serious risk. FOBP is worried also that XR’s lack of public liability insurance means no-one is insured, camper or member of the public, if there are any adverse events.

 

In environmental terms, to have up to 200 tents for up to a fortnight is a massive presence in the park; it will prevent enjoyment of that section of the park for two weeks by members of the public. The impact of so many tents and their occupants in one of the most ecologically sensitive parts of the park, especially if the weather is as bad as it has been, could be huge.

 

‘For XR to impose this on Brockwell Park without any public consultation, because it thinks it can get away with it, does not make it right,’ said FOBP chair, Peter Bradley. He urged XR to adopt its plan B and hold this camp on private ground and to do all in its power to honour past commitments and not pitch 200 tents in Brockwell Park for the next fortnight.

Brockwell Park 2016

The other day there was a beautiful Sunday afternoon. I wished I could have gathered the whole Council on the top of the hill that is Brockwell Park. As far as the eye could see were scattered clumps of sitting, picnicking, lying people.

This is what parks are about; the unique function that distinguishes them from pleasure gardens, sportsgrounds, performance arenas, racetracks – the reconnection with the natural environment for recharging the emotional, physical, and emotional batteries, the rediscovery of serenity, the momentary removal from the unrelenting rush, noise, and busyness of the urban life that otherwise surrounds us: personal regeneration.

I challenge you to walk a circuit of the park (40 minutes for me) on any ordinary (dry) workday without counting at least 100 people (times how many on a week-end?). How many times, too, does that daily population change and renew itself over that day? Why do these troops of people choose to sit, lie, divert their route to work, school, home through the park? To dip themselves for a moment in that natural environment, to reconnect with that recharging Green.

Other councils have recognised this, have heard and acknowledged the official professional medical endorsement by the NHS of the critical complementary role played by parks in the maintenance and regeneration of urban health, and have protected budgets and taken steps to preserve and maintain their borough’s havens of natural beauty.

By its actions Lambeth Council has consistently shown that it has never understood this. Either that, or it has chosen to ignore an inconvenient fact – that parks have an indispensable role of their own in public health and wellbeing, a role they cannot fulfil if they are simultaneously harnessed to an income-generating strategy that pays no regard whatever to the nature of that role and the users who depend on it. At the first sign of trouble, parks are dumped in the priority dustbin and thrown to income-generating departments to be trashed at will.

It may be difficult to quantify health and wellbeing on a balance sheet, but remove the source of them and you’ll soon see the gigantic debit hole they leave behind, dwarfing any puny fundraising credits achieved.

If you believe the NHS and others are right that urban parks are essential to the community that surrounds them, then the proper care and maintenance of those parks, the recognition of their inherent fragility, and the priority of ensuring they continue to serve the community that relies on them become paramount.

Last week, at the time of writing, a large piece of Brockwell Park was surrounded by 10ft+ high green walls to enable the ticket-only Found music event to take place. It would be a literal exaggeration, but, in terms of effect felt, a not really unfair description, to say that basically the hillside within the rectangle of paths to the right of the Herne Hill gate – up towards the Hall, across towards the Lido, up to the tennis courts, and across the top of the hill towards the Hall again, was largely swallowed by the walls. It takes me around 40 minutes to walk the complete perimeter of the park. I did two circuits of the FOUND enclosure. It took me 10 minutes the first time and 11 the next. No, you can’t make a direct transposition to a quarter of the park, but you get some idea of the extent of the area covered; an area, I would suggest, completely unsuitable for enclosing in a park the size of Brockwell Park. This is a reflection, I suspect, of the shameless premise put forward by the Lambeth events department that the events capacity of Brockwell Park could be compared with that of Hyde Park.

Park-damage-1

 

Raising of the walls began on June 6. The event itself took place on June 11, and the construction was due to be removed by June 15. Exclusion then for the public since June 6. Now that the walls are down, there will, I think, be little temptation to return. Where a few weeks ago was scattered with picnicking, sitting, lying, Frisbeeing people could now be mistaken for a brown field site. Swathes of mud, pitting, and scarring extend in every direction. Inland seagulls are normally to be found following the plough. You can see the point of the flock in the photograph, though, of dropping in here on Brockwell Park.

By the way, I don’t at all blame the Found organisers. They have proved themselves in many ways to be model managers. The nature of the event, in the weather, made the result inevitable.

There will be no more picnicking here this summer, I think we can say.

How long will it take to restore this? But wait. First, there will be another walled event on the same site in about three weeks’ time, followed a week later by the two days of the annual Lambeth Country Show.

Would you say any ecological or park-user factors—apart from money—were taken into account when agreeing this programme?

Brockwell Park is not mean with its hospitality. It is already host to the two days of the Lambeth Country Show, to Zippos Circus and to the travelling fair—twice each for around a week each year? Around 30 days each year? Brockwell provides tennis and volley ball courts, football pitches, bowling green, cricket pitch and nets, BMX track, children’s playground and paddling pool, horticultural and educational opportunities in the Community Greenhouses, apart from providing space for an infinite number of informal sports activities.

I put walled, ticketed events in a different category. They are by definition exclusive. I don’t believe the Lambeth events department agrees them for enhancement of the local community. It is, I believe, fundamentally simply for money. These events deface large areas of the park with ugly walls for considerable periods of time, excluding local people from them. They are not real community events, like all those above attracting people of all ages and ethnic backgrounds, benefiting from being located in the park. The Lambeth Country Show is hugely enhanced by its setting. Zippos and the travelling fair, by their nature, have no other type of venue open to them. What do customers of the gated events gain from being in the park? Once inside the venue, all they see are walls. They could be anywhere. The only advantage I can see is that I presume organisers pay a great deal less for siting their event in the park than they would if they were hiring a purpose-built arena. Is that a suitable use of the park?

Park-damage-2

Income generation may be necessary, although it is tempting to query why other boroughs do not seem to have to resort to this sort of measure. How many walled events are held in Dulwich Park? Regardless, the solution is not to try to turn parks and open spaces into cash cows.

The Friends of Brockwell Park calls on the Council, which is supposed to be acting as stewards on our behalf, to accord parks the acknowledgement of and the respect due to them for the vital daily role they play, as well as  for the users who depend on them, and for the first stage of any future event planning to be full consideration of and consultation on the impact on that park and its users.

Michael Boyle

Walled garden talks: new planting tours

All images by: Kate Hobbs

I was delighted to welcome 26 people to three tours around the Walled Garden during a pleasantly warm afternoon on Sunday June 19. First, a brief introduction to how the garden had evolved into its present state, from fruit and vegetable garden for Brockwell Hall when privately occupied, through to the present modernised version of the traditional shrub and herbaceous border garden developed when Brockwell became a public park in 1892.  Touring the garden, we focused on new, longer flowering varieties of old favourites, with geraniums and salvias especially making an impact in beauty and as bee attractors.

Garden-1

As the summer and autumn progress, other new plants will create an ever-changing picture.

FOBP continues to donate money for plants (many raised in the Community Greenhouses) and to do regular volunteer gardening work.

Laura Morland, Park Liaison Officer, FOBP

Garden-2

In her modesty, Laura has failed to mention all her work in designing the planting of the Walled Garden and in leading the team of volunteers implementing it. All Park users are indebted to her for her many contributions to this jewel in the crown of Brockwell Park and we thank her for them.

On a sad note, at the end of May, there were thefts of plants to the value of more than £100 from the Walled Garden. This was ‘definitely a theft of valuable plants, and not random vandalism’, according to Rory Harding from Brockwell Park Community Gardens. There have been similar thefts from the planting around Norwood Lodge. It is depressing that there are people knowledgeable enough to know the value of what they selfishly steal, lacking the decency to allow to all Park visitors the enjoyment of plants given by charities such as FOBP, BPCG and BPCP, and private individuals.

Lambeth Country Show 2016

Come and catch us at the Lambeth Country Show 2016

So it’s officially 18 sleeps now till the Lambeth Country Show 2016. We’re dreaming about the sleepy-eyed owls, the jousting, the sheep shearing, the Victoria sponges and those vegetables misshapenly looking like some celebrity misadventure. Basically we can’t wait. It’s on Saturday 16 and Sunday 17 July in Brockwell Park.

country-show-1With its blend of food stalls showcasing foods from across the globe, live music, children’s activities and arts and crafts, the show can’t fail to please. The Village Green is always a popular spot to meet friends, kick off shoes and relax to a mellow tune while the main stage is the place to catch the big sounds.

As usual, we’ll have a stall in the community section (follow the path up from the main gate and right a bit). Come and see us for some Brockwell Park chat. We’ll be giving out information about the park, signing up new members (and renewing old Friends) and taking the pulse of Brockwell Park at its liveliest and funkiest. We’d love to see you so do swing by.

And to get you in the Country Show mood (without the aid of cider), here are some memories of last year.Lambeth_Country_Show2