
Festival Park - Etruria, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire.
N 53° 01.650 W 002° 11.526
30U E 554183 N 5875634
Festival Park is an area of parkland, pools and trails located on the edge of the Festival Retail Park, Etruria in Stoke-on-Trent.
Waymark Code: WMV84E
Location: West Midlands, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 03/12/2017
Views: 3
Festival Park was the site of the second National Garden Festival of England. It was officially opened on May 7th 1986, by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II.
Background to the site. (
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The Festival site, together with Shelton and Etruria were key areas in the industrial development of the City of Stoke-on-Trent. Less than a decade before the ground vibrated to the sound of heavy machinery and the landscape was dominated by blast furnaces, forges and chimneys of the Shelton Steel Works. Half a kilometre south of this point is Etruria Hall (now part of the Moat House Hotel), former home of Josiah Wedgwood whose famous Etruria Pottery Works were once sited by the canal.
The City was given an unique opportunity to redevelop the derelict site by hosting the National Garden Festival of England. Over two million people visited the event in the summer of 1986. Thousands of exhibitions and activities were featured including seventy themed gardens and visitors were able to view the spectacle by railway and cable car.
The Garden Festival attracted new private investment into the City as well as creating a lasting legacy of green space for local people. Today the site is a combined leisure, retail and business park set in the Festival grounds for visitors and local people to enjoy."
The main site was completed in 1995, and is now known as Festival Park. It has been, for the most part, sympathetically treated by St. Modwen Properties who took on its management and development.
Much of the parkland, pools and trails have been retained as public open space, and are maturing very well. Some of the gardens, such as the Moorlands Heather Rock Garden and The Rocky Valley, survive with their planting scheme relatively intact.
Although most wooden structures have been left to return to nature, Festival Park is actively maintained by groundsmen. Some sculpture and a large Welsh slate water feature still remains, as does the full-size stone circle. The huge wooden suspension bridge across a wooded ravine remains and can still be used. The complex network of paths is maze-like, there is no signage, and it is very easy to get lost. Source: (
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