Gunnersbury Park to Hold Debrief Sessions on Summers Festivals


Meeting aims to bring residents and event organisers together

Pete Tong's Ibiza Classics to headline SPete Tong's Ibiza Classics at the Soho House Festival in 2023
Pete Tong's Ibiza Classics at the Soho House Festival in 2023

November 7, 2025

Gunnersbury Park and Museum will host a 2025 Summer Season debrief on Friday 14 November, with three identical sessions at 3pm, 4.30pm and 7pm designed to bring local residents, event organisers and partner bodies together to review the summer’s programme and feed into planning for 2026. The sessions are being presented as open conversations and are intended to cover sound management, environmental sustainability, resident liaison and traffic management, with representatives from the London Boroughs of Hounslow and Ealing, Gunnersbury Park and the event teams all taking part.

The debrief follows a summer of high-profile events at Gunnersbury, including a series of Festival Republic shows that brought large crowds to the park over August, which resulted in a wave of local reaction about how the events were managed. Residents and local campaigners raised concerns during the season about noise levels, the effectiveness of stewarding and the dispersal of audiences after late finishes, and some people reported anti-social behaviour in nearby streets and gardens, which prompted the park to review its approach to visitor management and facilities provision.

Park management says it has already begun to act on that feedback. Ahead of this autumn debrief, Gunnersbury announced a suite of changes aimed at reducing disruption and improving the visitor experience, including commissioning independent acoustic advice, boosting signage and toilet provision, and revising exit routes and transport planning to ease pressure on local transport hubs. Organisers point to a fall in formal noise complaints in recent seasons as evidence that some measures have had an effect, but they acknowledge more fine-tuning is needed and have invited residents to the November sessions so practical solutions can be developed collaboratively.

Residents who plan to attend are being asked to book free tickets; the park’s residents pages set out how the meetings will work and include contact details for follow-up. The debrief is being framed as an opportunity not only to review what went wrong but to capture what worked well — from volunteer-led activities to the economic and cultural benefits that high-quality events bring to the boroughs — and to make concrete commitments for next year’s season.

Local councillors and community representatives say they will use the debrief to press for clearer escalation routes when problems occur during events, and for more transparent post-event reporting on complaints and how they were handled. Several residents have told this site and other local media that they want faster responses from organisers during festivals and better communication about expected end times and stewarding arrangements so households living close to the park can prepare and plan.

Following publication of this article Cllr Jo Biddolph contacted us to say that she rejects the portrayal of residents’ views, saying it contradicts what people told her at festivals and at the Chiswick Area Forum and will confuse those who attended. She says residents want fewer festivals overall, oppose events running three consecutive days, and demand much lower noise levels and better noise management after music could be heard as far away as Ravenscourt Park. Many locals, she adds, doubt claims that low broadcast frequencies were suppressed—especially during the highly disruptive Krankbrother event—and want additional sound-level monitoring points to reflect how homes receive noise from multiple directions.

Cllr Biddolph also criticises inadequate marshalling, with organisers failing to staff agreed roads on the day, and calls for significantly more public toilets placed in several locations, prioritising public decency over cost. She says communications and complaints handling must improve so residents are heard and action follows, and wants a single festival email address to match the single residents’ phone number secured after years of lobbying. On park maintenance she demands better clear-ups and action to remove plastic and embedded waste from the soil. While acknowledging the CIC’s need to raise funds, she argues it must win the local community’s support rather than treating the issue as a battle of wills, criticises the CIC’s recent press release as “bullish spin,” and urges the organisation to move toward residents’ concerns.

Event organisers maintain that large-scale festivals require logistical trade-offs and that many of the practical changes already announced reflect lessons learned on site. They emphasise that safety, accessibility and environmental stewardship remain priorities, and that sustainable event delivery — from sound mitigation to waste management and transport planning — will be central to discussions at the debrief sessions.

For residents who wish to attend, free tickets and further information are available on this link.

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