Bute Park, the 56 hectares of gardens and parkland that were formerly the grounds of Cardiff Castle, is known as the Welsh capital’s “green heart”. The space, almost unique in the UK because of its proximity to the city centre, is visited2.5m timesa year.
This week the beeps of reversing lorries and the clanging of construction could be heard as event staff built a huge stage and fenced off swathes of the usually tranquil park for the new Blackweir Live music festival, an event many argue does not strike the right balance between public and private use of the park.
Starting on Friday, the site – named after the Blackweir Fields it sits on – will host for the next few weeks gigs by artists including Noah Kahan,Alanis Morissetteand Stevie Wonder.
The space can hold 35,000 people and takes up about two-thirds of the park’s 12 hectares (30 acres) of open grassland, including cricket and other sports grounds, according to Friends of Bute Park. On concert days, the group estimates that approximately 29 hectares will be closed off to the public, rising to 45 hectares, or 81% of the whole park, if access routes for concert-goers are included.
Cardiff is no different to many local authorities in experimenting with new ways to bring in desperately needed cash: the council says the festival, programmed by Live Nation’s Cuffe and Taylor and Cardiff’s Depot Live, will help meet its £27.7m budget shortfall and put money back into the city.
About 100 people have signed an open letter to the leader of Cardiff council protesting againstthe use of the parkfor Blackweir Live, saying the city is already home to several other music venues.
They also say the Blackweir Live site has reduced the availability of vital space relied on by people who do not have access to gardens in the densely populated parts of Cardiff, and may have a detrimental impact on the park’s flora and fauna as no environmental assessment took place before an indefinite licence was granted.
Bute Park’s orchard, set up in 2021 after more than 50 trees were damaged or destroyed by vandals, is now inaccessible because of a 6-metre-high wall surrounding thesite, other than through a locked gate. This has made it impossible for volunteers to water the trees, says Madeleine McGivern, a member of Friends of Bute Park.
She said: “Earlier this year 30 mature trees on the river were cut down for no reason at all. Then temporary bridges to the site were put in the same spot, which is very upsetting.”
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Fiona Peel, who lives in the park’s 18th-century cottage, said: “I have no problem with using the park for events. What I object to is how this was set up, with no input from the community, selling tickets before the licence was even approved.”
Cardiff council did not immediately respond to a request for comment but has previously said the felled trees were either dead or affected by ash dieback. It also said there were several public consultations about the proposal and that selling tickets in advance was common practice.
Naiya Ghuman, a student who was walking her dog Cali in Bute Park on Wednesday, said she was surprised by the size of the festival. “The site is really huge. I don’t think the concerts are a bad idea, but they definitely have to clean it up properly afterwards.”