Further to my recent posting, information now received about the proposed two Live nation events - Saturday 1 July (unnamed) and Friday 7th to Sunday 9 July (Wireless).
The programme of proposed events this summer is now as follows:
Rinse - Music festival - 10,000 attendees
On site - Monday 22 May
Festival start - Saturday 27 May
Festival end - Sunday 28 May
Off site - Friday 2 June
followed three days later by
Slammin TBC - Music festival - 12,000 attendees
On site - Monday 5 June
Festival start - Saturday 10 June
Festival end - Sunday 11 June
Off site - Wednesday 14 June
followed six days later by
concert (not named, organised by Live Nation) - Music festival - 40,000 attendees
On site – Tuesday 20 June
Festival start – Saturday 1 July
Festival end – Saturday 1 July
Off site – Thursday 6 July
Wireless Festival 2017 - Music festival - 40,000 attendees
On site – Tuesday 27 June
Festival start – Friday 7 July
Festival end – Sunday 9 July
Off site – Saturday 15 July
Mama - Music Festival - 20,000 attendees
On site - Tuesday 29 August
Festival start - Saturday 9 September
Festival end - Sunday 10 September
Off site - Friday 15 September
followed three days later by
Slammin (Hospitality in the Park & Tranzmission) - Music festival - 12,000
On site - Monday 18 September
Festival start- Saturday 23 September
Festival end - Sunday 24 September
Off site - Friday 27 October (???????)
The confirmation that the two events (Wireless and the unnamed concert) are being proposed for the beginning of July will mean that large areas of the park will be out of bounds to park users from Monday 22 May right through till Saturday 15 July. Only two days Saturday 3 June and Sunday 4 June and five days from Thursday 15 June to Monday 19 June when there is no setting up or taking down going on.
We also have a similar situation in August/September when set up starts on Tuesday 29 August and the site isn’t cleared until Friday 29 September (the date of Friday 27 October - must be a mistake?).
So large areas of the park will be out of bounds for three months this summer.
If you want to comment upon these events please note that the Council will NOT consider comments from individuals, they will only consider comments from recognised stakeholders of the park, councillors from the three boroughs (Haringey, Islington and Hackney), representative neighbourhood groups, local schools and business organizations.
If you are a member of a park user group, neighbourhood group or business organization, comments should be sent to the chair of that group. If you are not a member send comments to your local councillor, Haringey residents can find out who there councillor is at http://www.minutes.haringey.gov.uk/mgFindMember.aspx.
The deadline for comments on Rinse, Slammin and Mama has already passed however, for Wireless and the unnamed concert comments have to be with the Council before Thursday 26 January.
Now that we know the entirety of the event plans I think that people should also consider commenting upon the plans as a whole as individual events might not be a problem but taken as a series of events they could constitute a problem in terms of access to the park and noise etc.
Tags for Forum Posts: finsbury park, finsbury park events
Replies are closed for this discussion.
I think the point is that they used to have events for fun and now they have them for money to cover the bills. I used to try to say that it was only by running events in Finsbury Park that some of the poorer inner city kids could go to music festivals and get off their heads but, even without having to travel and own a tent, I think most kids around here are priced out anyway,
Why's that.. ? Oh whoopee Ben, thanks.. The moment KB takes back calling me a racist, then I'll see what I can do..
Hah, I guess you didn't like being picked up on lighting.
edited
Sorry it's at least 40% if not more. A few years ago I took a map of FP divided it up into squares. I then subtracted the areas which are not accessible by the public - the staff yard; the lake; the new cafe at Manor House; the play area at Finsbury Park gate etc. Live Nation had over 40% of the remaining area. And the remaining area wasn't the flat ground suitable for playing games it is the sloping area down the hill towards Endymion Rd - fancy a game of football on that slope.
The smaller events have a smaller area but they make up for that in the noise they produce. Events like Slammin revel in the amount of noise they can make.
Do you ever think about local residents?
"if you include the space taken up by trees, bushes, fences etc it could be even more than that :-)" - smarty - why don't you also include benches, rubbish bins etc.
The areas within the event are definitely off limits. You can't have park users wandering about whilst you are setting up - ask the Health & Safety Executive. Last year Live Nation had their area well fenced off with no access for the park users.
Perhaps because your photo doesn't exist! I visit FP most days and remember well the fences and the lack of people within the fences. See my photo: ---
Dear Mr Bin,
As you are a resident of Berlin, Germany, I don't think that that gives you a greater insight into the FP issues than real local Haringey residents. The issue is not the percentage of people from Haringey or other parts of London. I would be quite happy if every sq. foot (or sq. metres as Germans say) was occupied by happy, sun-loving Londoners.
No, the issue is of Haringey Council allowing event promoters to come in and use the parkland for what is a money making venture (if I remember £65 a day for day tickets in 2016) which has an impact in terms of using the park and noise pollution.
Do you care - no - because you are sitting in Berlin and you don't have this issue to contend with.
Conversation moderated to bring in line with HoL house rules
Supporting or opposing events in the park does not seem to me relevant to what is happening there. In the summer of last year the High Court heard a submission by the Friends of Finsbury Park that Haringey was acting beyond its legal powers by, amongst other things, making an area exceeding 10% of the area of the park unavailable to the general public. What the High Court said was the legislation governing the area of a park in London could be restricted in this way had been superceeded by subsequent legislation so the 10% issue was no longer relevant.
The High Court judgement is now of course siting there as precedent for all such events, not just those taking place in Haringey.
There's is a link below to the High Court judgement. Paragraphs 42 to 50 seem the most relevant.
https://www.ftbchambers.co.uk/sites/default/files/R%20(Friends%20of...
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