Opinion: Vivid Sydney Has Potential For Disaster

Yes, every year Vivid Sydney is crowded but everything does have a limit to how crowded one space can be…

As a keen spectator of major Sydney events, I have been following Vivid Sydney since its inception in 2009 and have attended every year since 2013. For the first few years of the event’s history, the Sydney Opera House was the symbol of the event and the Vivid Light component slowly grew in size but on a grand scale, it was still minute. Then came 2013. The Sydney Harbour Bridge was brought into the event and Vivid exploded in popularity.

The Queen’s Birthday long weekend is well known for being THE most crowded time of Vivid Sydney and while this year’s edition had the extra factor of an East Coast Low causing nearly a whole weekend of the event to be cancelled, the following Long Weekend clearly showed that if the event is to grow in popularity even further, organisers are either not ready for it, have been making misjudgements from the beginning or in the worse possible scenario, putting social media publicity before the lives of people.

I’ve thought about writing an article about the crowds for a few years but the potential danger is now too great for me to not draw attention to it. A simple e-mail to Vivid won’t suffice in my opinion so consider this article an open letter to Vivid Sydney.

Long Weekend Crowds

As an University graduate majoring in event management and a fan of Sydney’s major pyrotechnic/lighting events, for fun I try to look for potential problems as I like to ‘look after’ these events. Clearly as everyone else did, one of the first problems I noticed was the crowds on the 2013 Long Weekend around Circular Quay. I have no doubt that Vivid did try to fix this problem. I assumed the solution was to expand the Festival to outside the city and hence, free up space inside the city. In 2014, Vivid expanded to Martin Place, The Star & the University Of Sydney; in 2015, to Chatswood, Central Park & Pyrmont and in 2016, to Taronga Zoo & the Royal Botanic Gardens (also to celebrate their respective anniversaries).

While in most cases this solution would work, in my opinion it wouldn’t work in this case. That is because people attend Vivid for the Sydney Opera House/Harbour Bridge and the Sydney Opera House/Harbour Bridge only. They are going to Circular Quay regardless of where other lights are unless it is something iconic like Taronga Zoo. The solution did produce successful new precincts but the overall crowds at Circular Quay, mainly full of tourists, still remained.

So a more recent solution to be implemented was to extend the event by 5 days. This sounds good in writing but when you think about it, it makes little to no difference. Firstly, this year, it added only 1 Saturday, 1 Friday and 3 other weekdays. Vivid is only attended on weekends – few people attend on weeknights – and with 3 of the 5 extra days non-Friday weeknights, this solution would produce little relief on the Long Weekend crowds. So the basic logic would have been to make the event run on weekends more or make the event run only on Friday nights/weekends over a longer time scale (such as 2 months). A benefit of this would be more worthwhile electricity usage (better than heaps of lights and no one to see it).

A more overall realistic solution to ease crowds, which I thought of after the 2013 event, would be to make the Vivid Light Walk an one-way loop. Using the Martin Place precinct as the starting point, the loop would go through the Domain back along the foreshore westward to Barangaroo before heading south to Wynyard Railway Station where it would finish. People could also enter and exit the route at the major train/ferry stops & the walk between Wynyard and Martin Place is small enough to make a full loop. Having 2 major entry/exit points (Circular Quay & Martin Place/Wynyard) can allow people to divide their journey into 2 days – 1 journey per day. It would also allow the Sydney Opera House projections to be shown on both sides if finances allowed it.

A potential one-way loop.
A potential one-way loop.

The one-way loop concept was implemented at Taronga Zoo and the Royal Botanic Gardens this year & while I only attended Taronga Zoo, it made a whirl of difference to the clogging that two-way crowds create. Taronga Zoo’s Vivid experience was by far the most pleasant Vivid experience I’ve had to date… but that wasn’t the same when I returned back to Circular Quay.

While the popularity of Vivid combined with a long weekend is a major factor at play in creating these crowds, I believe other small factors are contributing in negative ways and if organisers don’t fix them, they could combine to create a disaster.

The Purpose Of The Barricade?

One of the other problems I first encountered in 2013 and still exists to this day, is the barricading of Circular Quay Promenade at either the western or eastern end. Whilst it is likely they have done that to ease crowds by redirecting them along Alfred Street, it baffled me as most people have the instinct to walk past the ferry terminals either to hop on transport or to walk to the other side’s lights (unless they are interested in seeing the Customs House projections). It also baffled me as it took everyone to a bottleneck anyway.

Approximate location of the barricades
Approximate location of the barricades

I presumed the objective of the barricade is to assist people catching public transport at Circular Quay so any queues that form don’t affect the Vivid Light Walk especially on the Long Weekend. The Cahill Expressway forms a physical barrier between the foreshore and Customs House & as most associate the Vivid Light Walk as a foreshore walk, the instinct is to walk past the ferry wharves instead of heading to Customs House (unless you wanted to see the Customs House projections). The same instinct applies if you like to catch a ferry or train. Unlike all the other major projection shows, Customs House is also hidden behind the Cahill Expressway. On the other side of the Cahill Expressway is also Alfred Street and while the road is closed from traffic, people treat it like an open road and so they walk close to the road’s edge anyway causing bottlenecks along the side-walks on the approach to Customs House. Bottlenecks are also caused by bus shelters narrowing the space to walk. These bus shelters also act as a physical barrier to the route. The Vivid Light Walk is also poorly signed and so most people don’t know the ‘official route’.

Pink: The Official 2016 'Vivid Light Walk'. Blue: Instinct route if you going to Customs House. Orange: Instinct route if you wish to bypass Customs House. Black: Barricade Locations
Pink: The Official 2016 ‘Vivid Light Walk’.
Blue: Instinct route if you going to Customs House.
Orange: Instinct route if you wish to bypass Customs House.
Black: Barricade locations

In fact, the Vivid Light Walk‘s official route doesn’t go past the ferry wharves. It runs along Alfred Street instead but due to poor signage, no one knows that and so instinct kicks in. So why put a barricade when it’s not on the route? Well firstly, it is a precaution to protect against that instinct. So why not put up more directional signage? That I don’t know. The main objective, like I said, would be to assist public transport users at Circular Quay so wouldn’t a better solution be to add Vivid Light Walk & Circular Quay Transport Interchange directional signage, remove the barricade and install temporary Opal card/ticket gates there instead and also around the promenade’s other access points? That way public transport users (particularly ferry users) can still access the transport interchange while Vivid Sydney visitors can follow the official route around past Customs House?

A proposed access strategy. Pink: 'Vivid Light Walk' Directional Signage. Green: Circular Quay Transport Interchange Directional Signage Orange: Circular Quay Transport Interchange Opal Card/Ticket Barriers
A proposed access strategy.
Pink: ‘Vivid Light Walk’ Directional Signage.
Green: Circular Quay Transport Interchange Directional Signage
Orange: Circular Quay Transport Interchange Opal Card/Ticket Barriers

The barricade might be a probable error on Vivid‘s part but if it wasn’t, it leads me to think that Vivid Sydney might be intentionally driving crowd flow away from the ferry wharves in order to promote Customs House. This would drive up social media publicity of the iconic projection show and hence, boost the profile and economic benefits of the event. It’s a horrifying idea that lives might be put behind money & social media but it seems plausible as the barricades are ideally placed so the crowd is forced to follow the official designated route of the Vivid Light Walk (1 ferry wharf is outside the barricades). And like I said before, unlike all the other major projection shows, Customs House is also hidden behind the Cahill Expressway so people might not be aware of its existance unless they see it in front of them but I don’t think Vivid Sydney organisers would stoop that low – it is more likely a poorly thought out crowd control measure.

I’ve always intended to watch a Customs House projection show but the crowds, bottlenecks and that barricade always prevent me from doing so. Most of the time I’ve watched part of the show in a queue.

The Train System

Now we head to 2016. I went to Vivid on the rainy Friday night prior to the East Coast Low’s arrival. It’s just past 8:30pm and the rain had just started bucketing down for it’s first lengthy downpour. Heaps of people decided to leave Vivid at this point. The line to the ticket machine was long (which is expected particularly with non-Opal card users like foreign tourists – maybe a special Vivid paper transport ticket for tourists should be introduced?) but the line to the Opal card/ticket readers was worse.

It took a good several minutes to get from the back of the line and through the gate. The line was that long, a person I was with was separated by roughly 5 metres from me at 1 point. A lot of people were trying to enter the station…but not many were trying to exit the station. There are roughly 8 ticket gates on 1 of the 2 sides of Circular Quay’s railway station but at this point of the night, only 2 were open to entering passengers on, at least, the side I was on.

Compared to the exiting passengers, the entering passengers deserved at least 4 more gates open. This would fasten things up but the next problem is to prevent a crowd crush inside the small foyer immediately after the gates and also up the staircases, escalators & lifts. As Wynyard-bound trains arrive on 1 platform & St James-bound trains on the other, the tickets gates, staircases, lifts & escalators should be designated signs & fenced inbetween so as to direct people to/from their platforms immediately instead of having them approaching or entering the gates and then trying to figure out which is the right one to go to and hence, causing a delay. As the escalators are already one-way, the 2 lifts & 2 staircases per platform could be divided into 1 ‘entrance’ and 1 ‘exit’. Above the Opal card/ticket readers could be a sign saying ‘Platform 1 only – Platform 2 Other Entrance’ etc. For this to work though, Sydney Trains would need to be up on the platforms directing passengers off the train to the correct exit.

A potential access strategy for Circular Quay Railway Station. Black: Fences Green: Entrance Red: Exit Note: The larger spaces are there to allow people requiring assistance to access the lifts easier.
A potential access strategy for Circular Quay Railway Station.
Black: Fences
Green: Entrance
Red: Exit
Note: The larger spaces are there to allow people requiring assistance to access the lifts easier.

During Vivid, Circular Quay Railway Station is ‘pick-up’ only between 6pm & 11pm on Saturdays & the Long Weekend but this is publicised very little. Vivid needs to publicise this more. The ‘pick-up’ only implementation is a good idea to help meet capacity needs but in my opinion, doesn’t need to be implemented prior to 8:30pm. Prior to 8:30pm, it is worker peak hour so why should the workers get the right of access even when thousands of tourists are expecting to hop off at Circular Quay? Workers access the station every day of the year and during Vivid, Wynyard & St James are operating as normal nearly so why can’t for just 7 days a year, hop on at a different stop? On the Long Weekend & Saturdays, workers are entering the stations at lower than normal rates anyway due to it being the weekend and/or a public holiday. To implement my idea, when Circular Quay is at capacity, some flexibility is required similar to the ‘pick-up’ only concept:

  • During expected mass arrival times (such as 5pm to 7:40pm on Friday/(Long) Weekends), it should be drop-off only (i.e. above diagram all red). To hop on, head to St James or Wynyard.
  • During expected arrival times (such as 5pm to 7:40pm on weekdays) but passenger arrivals = visitor departures due to the worker peak hour, the above diagram should be implemented.
  • During balanced times on Fridays/(Long) Weekends where passenger arrivals = visitor departures (such as between 7:40pm & 9:20pm), the above diagram should be implemented.
  • During expected departure times (such as 9:20pm to Midnight on weekdays) but visitor departures is equal to or less than passenger arrivals, normal City Circle operation should occur.
  • During (un)expected mass departure times (such as 9:20pm to Midnight on Friday/(Long) Weekends or sudden inclement weather), it should become pick-up only (i.e. above diagram all green). If you’re being dropped off, it would be either at Wynyard or St James. Trains could even ‘terminate’ at Wynyard & St James, compulsorily emptying the train before travelling to Circular Quay to start a new journey filling up the carriages all with Vivid visitors.

This year’s Vivid also saw the traditional finishing time of Midnight moved an hour forward to 11pm. The reason why they did this I have no clue so I asked them why. A Destination New South Wales spokesperson said:

“Vivid Sydney is always evolving, and like any major international festival we take away key learnings each year and adapt our programming to best serve our audience.

While the festival continues to grow in overall attendance with a record 1.7 million attending last year, we know that attendee numbers do drop off significantly by 11pm and therefore at the ‘Vivid Light Walk’ in the CBD, lights have this year switched off at 11pm. However we have added five nights to this year’s Festival giving visitors even more time to explore and enjoy all that Vivid Sydney has to offer.”

Their comment sounds fair – they are saying most people have already left by 11pm. Even if it is minor in size, the earlier finishing time, without a doubt, would see crowds building up larger than usual as people depart at 11pm this year particularly around Circular Quay Railway Station.

Even if my train system ideas above was implemented, it wouldn’t have helped in my situation as my train was nearly 10-15 minutes late. This banked up commuters on the platform. They should, in future (unless they already do), allocate the number of people going through the ticket gates to meet the capacity of the next train. They could probably use Opal card data to estimate the current capacity of each approaching train. If the trains were empty as they approached like in my suggestion above for mass departures, a full platform-length train could hold approximately 900 people – a great relief on the system given trains can be as frequent as every 5 minutes. My train’s lateness puzzled me as while yes, it was raining heavily, Vivid Sydney is supposed to have “4,500 additional public transport services including extra trains”.

When I went to the International Fleet Review in 2013, during the 3 days I was there, the public transport system did not seem to be any different to a normal day despite the same promise as above being made. This led me to presume it is actually a lie to encourage people to use public transport when it fact, there are little extra services available resulting in long queues and overcrowding anyway. At Vivid, the train’s lateness made me think the same is happening 3 years later.

I checked the list of departures of trains leaving Circular Quay between 6pm & 11pm on Saturday 11th June 2016 (during Vivid) with another list for Saturday the 25th of June 2016 (after Vivid) during the same times. What did I find? More services during Vivid! Yay!…Ok, “service”. That’s right – only 1 extra train service was added during the Saturday of the Long Weekend. Trains were no different compared to an ordinary Sydney Saturday – however, it is noted that trains were slightly more frequent just prior to 11pm, this year’s ‘lights off‘ moment of each Vivid night. The increased frequency was probably a way to keep up with the larger than normal crowds around Circular Quay Railway Station at 11pm as everyone would be leaving at that point of that night for sure this year due to the change in the ‘lights off’ moment from 12am to 11pm. So, at least for trains, 0.002% of all supposed ‘extra public transport services’ was a train stopping at Circular Quay – the mecca of Vivid Sydney.

Frequency of trains at Circular Quay Railway Station in minutes.
Frequency of trains at Circular Quay Railway Station in minutes.

To be fair, the above shouldn’t be surprising as the current Sydney train fleet is always meeting an 100% demand rate – it couldn’t cope with extra services without removing services from other lines. Either way, this shows that the increasing popularity of Vivid will cause strain on the train system particularly the City Circle.

As the train eventually arrived, a few people hopped off before everyone casually hopped onto the train. Then to everyone’s surprise, the guard starts blowing his whistle and more and more frequently. The initial whistle caused a sudden rush for the train doors. I didn’t rush (as we had barely started to hop on the train when the whistle was blown) but the movement of people pushed me forward. I was now stuck between the left door and another person on the right. It was the beginnings of a crowd crush from a sudden stampede.

A stampede can be defined as an ‘uncontrolled concerted running as an act of mass impulse among a crowd of people in which the crowd collectively begins running, often in an attempt to escape a perceived threat’. The perceived threat was being left behind after waiting nearly 15 minutes for a train that has barely let a customer in. The train, in fact, was fairly empty when the crush occurred as I eventually found myself standing in the aisle on the upper tier looking out the window to an empty platform but the guard’s impatience could have caused a disastrous crush. Had the guard waited patiently, everyone would have gotten on casually and after waiting a small amount of time (compared to the 15 minutes we waited for the train), the train could leave safely.

Being stuck inside the door with 3 other people and masses of people inside and outside the train, people started to move ahead as the initial people who hopped on found somewhere to ride the train. Eventually, a small opening arrived so I could go up the first staircase I could see. I went for it relieving more pressure on the crowd crush before finding myself on the top tier aisle with no more room to move as the rest of the aisle was full. Getting off at our desired stop was a bit difficult with a full aisle but we managed it,  just. A possible way to avoid that last bit is to, during Vivid, allocate carriages to passengers’ desired destinations so the shortest journey passenger sit in the centre carriages while the longest journey passengers sit in the outer carriages near the driver/guard. This would also help prevent people heading into carriages that are already full. This idea is only for Circular Quay Railway Station and would look like this if implemented during Vivid:

Trains

This may be more difficult to implement than my other ideas as passengers’ destinations may vary each time a train arrives, it is very difficult to prevent passengers going through ticket barriers based on their destination (unless they are happy to wait) and lastly, there is little room, once you reach the top of the staircases or hop off the escalators/lifts, to think about where along the platform you should go. So to implement the above, station staff would need to work very efficiently as well as keeping the general principle that if you got a short journey head to the centre of the platform while if you got a long journey, head to the ends of the platform. Why the centre of the platform for short journeys? Because at the next stops, people are most likely to hop onto the centre carriages. If people with short journeys are hopping off at these stops, it would refill the carriage without overloading other carriages that are full with passengers taking long journeys.

Remember that on the Long Weekend during Vivid, Circular Quay is a pick-up only railway station but the amount of trains is pretty much the same as the next Vivid Saturday, a non-long weekend Saturday, where the station is pick-up & drop-off. What I experienced was just the beginning of a crowd crush caused by a rare stampede. It was the first crowd crush I felt could have happened at Vivid and it was on a Friday night when it was raining & wasn’t a Long Weekend. What could happen when it is a Saturday night that is clear and moon-lit & is the Long Weekend? The potential is there now due to Vivid’s increasing popularity and organisers haven’t managed to ease the crowds in 3 years. I was planning to write a letter after the event ended so next year’s event could accommodate it but even with the East Coast Low, I didn’t expect it to nearly happen on a bigger scale 1 week later and this time Vivid has explaining to do. It clearly was preventable on an organisational scale.

Long Weekend 2016: Saturday – East Circular Quay Near-Crowd Crush

https://twitter.com/Kapes1411/status/741563071139700736

https://twitter.com/richardhhull/status/741562378303639552

We arrive at the Long Weekend of Vivid Sydney 2016. It is the first weekend after the East Coast Low cancelled the previous weekends Vivid Sydney. A highly popular new lighting installation, the Cathedral Of Light, is a centrepiece of the new Royal Botanic Gardens precinct. On the Saturday night, people arrive at Vivid to head immediately to the installation. What met them was nearly a crowd crush.

There were reports of people being treated by paramedics, children crying & even a gas bottle exploding. People were left not moving for up to 45 minutes. East Circular Quay & the Royal Botanic Gardens was soon declared ‘reached capacity’ at 8pm – the first declaration of it’s kind in the event’s history I believe – but Vivid‘s social media posts don’t actually indicate the area was sealed off (I wasn’t there so I don’t know). They only ‘recommend’ going somewhere else. If it was managed access, tents, fences & turnstiles would be there every day just in case but out of all the years I’ve been to Vivid, Taronga Zoo is the only place I’ve seen managed access (as they have the facilities to do that). The only possible ‘managed access’ that could have existed is small road closure/crowd control barriers being relocated or police/volunteers/private security guards blocking the path. I wasn’t there so I can’t be 100% certain but I think that is likely the case – very little proper ‘managed access’. Luckily, no one was seriously injured.

But Vivid organisers should have seen this coming even without an East Coast Low causing abnormally high crowds. Why? Because the near-crowd crush occurred in 1 particular spot not the whole of Circular Quay. The Cathedral Of Light installation was clearly the stand out attraction in the direction of the Sydney Opera House and based on previous years, it’s popularity should have been clearly expected. If you compare this photo of the Cathedral Of Light with this photo of Vivid 2013’s popular Hundreds & Thousands installation, you can see they are nearly identical apart from colour. The Cathedral Of Light was bound to be a hit. The choice of location and crowd control measures to accommodate that location is what failed in this instance.

The location as mentioned earlier was the Royal Botanic Gardens. The Royal Botanic Gardens has many access points but for Vivid Sydney it had only one. This would be ok normally and was managed correctly but Vivid Sydney organisers didn’t take into account that the Royal Botanic Gardens entrance is at the dead end of the narrow Light Walk path from Circular Quay. Regardless of where you came from, you had to funnel down through the narrow path along East Circular Quay to reach the Cathedral Of Light. Macquarie Street, which runs behind the buildings on East Circular Quay, was closed to traffic and whilst it could have had the same near-crowd crush effect if the crowd was larger, most people didn’t use that road as an access route as it is not listed as part of the Vivid Light Walk and people treat closed roads as open roads except during crushes or times of impatience.  As crowds & queues built up at the Royal Botanic Gardens entrance, it started to bank up all the way down to the Moore Steps – the narrowest part of East Circular Quay – where the near-crush occurred. The fact that people walk along East Circular Quay to leave the Royal Botanic Gardens was the final deciding factor in the near-crush’s creation. Two-way crowds combined with narrow space = near-crowd crush. The Moore Steps were then used an ‘escape route’ to Macquarie Street. The Moore Steps are narrow too and could easily have done more or even severe damage.

The location of the crowd crush Red: Crowd crush location - The Moore Steps is the narrowest part of the red zone. Pink: The official 2016 'Vivid Light Walk' route. Black: Other physical barriers (apart from the East Circular Quay buildings) in gaining access to the Royal Botanic Gardens such as cliffs, driveways, closed gates & fences.
The location of the near-crowd crush
Red: Near-crowd crush location – The Moore Steps is the narrowest part of the red zone.
Pink: The official 2016 ‘Vivid Light Walk’ route.
Black: Other physical barriers (apart from the East Circular Quay buildings) in gaining access to the Royal Botanic Gardens such as cliffs, driveways, closed gates & fences.

Here is the view from below the Moore Steps:

View from Philip Street (non-closed road 100 metres away from the near-crush):

While no one was seriously injured in this near-crush, this near-crush was easily 10 times worse than mine, which was just the beginning of a near-crush and was partly caused by a stampede from a guard’s whistle. This was nearly a full crush. It lasted nearly an hour. It has happened. It can happen again. Vivid has to be prepared for an increase in popularity. It took nearly a decade for NYE to reach 1.5 million visitors. Vivid took 6 years. It could be larger than NYE very soon and the event’s organisation is not up to scratch. NYE also has the benefit that crowds don’t leave soon after they enter while with Vivid, the crowds are continuously moving. These near-crowd crushes had about 19,000 people in them each night. 2 near-crushes in the space of a week are too much for a highly popular international event. Organisers need to take crowd control more seriously before someone gets seriously injured or dies.

Solutions

Assuming they are planning exactly the same things next year, possible solutions include….

  • More directional signage. It could be arrows on the ground or on poles – at least it is identifiable as Vivid.
  • Make an exit from the Royal Botanic Gardens near the Conservatorium Of Music – this is a short walk back to Circular Quay.
  • Close all roads north & inclusive of Bridge Street & Conservatorium Road up to Circular Quay for all except Macquarie Street which should be closed up to the Sydney Opera House. Cahill Expressway should stay open though.
  • Put more popular attractions near Walsh Bay – this is usually a quiet spot due to it being west of the Bridge, which is a physical barrier in the Light Walk. This would decrease the amount of people heading towards the Royal Botanic Gardens if there is a major attraction in Walsh Bay.
  • Include Macquarie Street & the Tarpeian Precinct in the Vivid Light Walk with the Tarpeian Precinct part of the Royal Botanic Gardens experience.
  • Make East Circular Quay northbound travelling with Macquarie Street/Tarpeian Precinct southbound travelling. Macquarie Street can be made two-way if East Circular Quay begins to not handle northbound-only crowds.
  • Sell free tickets for time-slotted openings into the Royal Botanic Gardens.
  • Sell free tickets for time-slotted openings into East Circular Quay.
  • The Sydney Opera House & businesses along East Circular Quay can sell their own free tickets out of the ones issued (aiding business without conflicting crowds). For example, buy 1 movie ticket, free Vivid access included. Product/service prices should not increase to make an increased profit from that proposed offer though as prices are probably already higher than usual due to Vivid.
  • Direct all non-ticket holders west of Circular Quay. There is still a free sound-tracked view of the Sydney Opera House projections at Dawes Point. You also pass the Museum Of Contemporary Art and Customs House projections along the way.
  • If non-ticketed, make Vivid an one-way loop as mentioned earlier.
  • If non-ticketed, extend Vivid to 2 months in duration but only on Friday, Saturday, Sunday (& Monday on the Long Weekend) nights. It will be the same amount of days with roughly the same crowd numbers & more worthwhile electricity usage.

I’ve forgotten if I had any more possible solutions. If I think of more, I’ll add them to the list.

https://twitter.com/DArcySteve/status/741574046043627521

Then Sunday came…

For the next day, I thought Vivid would respond to the crowd crush situation by making crowd control measures better (as they were clearly caught off-guard) as the crowds for Sunday should have been roughly the same and while the Moore Steps near-crowd crush did occur again, it was slightly less intense than Saturday’s but Vivid didn’t seem to be ready for it still. The 3 first posts below even possibly indicates that they even prevented people escaping up the Moore Steps this time:

 

I read reports that there were conflicting instructions from police, volunteers etc. inadvertently making the near-crowd crush worse (as the two-way traffic is a major contributing factor to it). Vivid did however warn people of potentially larger crowds around that area 2 hours prior to 6pm. This was a good move by them but this passage of writing baffled me: “To ensure pedestrian safety, the only access to the popular ‘Cathedral of Light’ at the Royal Botanic Garden Sydney will be via the Sydney Opera House forecourt ie. there is no access to the Cathedral of Light via Macquarie Street/Tarpeian Way.

Whilst it is unclear from that statement if Macquarie Street & Tarpeian Way allowed people to leave the Royal Botanic Gardens that way, it does make it clear that Vivid is insisting people walk through the narrow East Circular Quay path to the Sydney Opera House forecourt as it will “ensure pedestrian safety” but in my opinion does the complete opposite especially as Macquarie Street is closed to traffic and the Tarpeian Precinct is, well, empty. The only reason I can see why they advised this is to avoid long queues or a crowd crush at the Royal Botanic Gardens gates but judging from photographs, those gates were well managed – only a long queue would form. There is plenty of space around the Sydney Opera House to walk around so if people didn’t want to wait a long queue, they just had to leave as simple as that.

While Sunday’s near-crush was less in intensity, it did start way earlier than Saturday’s with the Royal Botanic Gardens reaching capacity 6 minutes after it opened. East Circular Quay did not reach it’s designated capacity but the near-crush still occurred at the same spot. Vivid doesn’t post capacities of each precinct but based on Sydney NYE‘s capacities, the capacity of the combined Sydney Opera House/East Circular Quay area is currently 15,200 people with 8000 of that being the capacity of East Circular Quay. As the near-crush occurred but the area hadn’t reached ‘capacity’, Vivid either has the wrong capacity limit or doesn’t have one and just defines whether it is at ‘full capacity’ based on what it looks like on the ground at the time. If it is the latter, that is very dangerous especially on the Long Weekend.

The scientific definition of a crowd crush is when crowd density reaches 9 to 10 people per square metre & this number is sustained for a significant amount of time but a density of 6-7 people per square metre is when people become uncomfortable & the situation becomes dangerous. When East Circular Quay’s capacity of 8,000 for Vivid is reached, the density should be about 1-2 people per square metre.

Vivid, 90 minutes later, posted another update but to only indicate that it is busy at East Circular Quay. The near-crush was at it’s worst shortly after this point and what happened to the Royal Botanic Gardens reaching capacity? Now it is just “large volumes of people“:

Hundreds of people, none the less, complained about the near-crowd crush. The media didn’t take notice of it – probably assuming it was solely due to the East Coast Low. The next day, Monday, was the public holiday but as people headed back to work the next day, crowds were down on the previous two nights. Vivid again advised pedestrians “not to use Macquarie Street” something that, like I said, baffled me:

No near-crush occurred on the Monday night but that didn’t stop hundreds of people warning others on social media to be careful around the Moore Steps. Vivid may have good answers on why their crowd/traffic management plans were the way they were and I would like to know why especially as a person interested in event management but in any case, Vivid clearly has to be prepared for the increasing popularity otherwise it may end in tragedy like it nearly did on the Long Weekend. Destination New South Wales is the government organisation that puts Vivid on and so on the Sunday night, I asked for a general comment on the crowds around East Circular Quay:

Destination New South Wales’s Response

A Destination New South Wales spokesperson said “As expected, Vivid Sydney was once again very popular on Sunday night.

“Eastern Circular Quay, the Sydney Opera House forecourt and Royal Botanic Garden precincts were again crowd favourites.

“Vivid Sydney worked closely with other Government agencies to enact our crowd management plans to ensure the safety of our visitors. This led to a number of changes to traffic conditions around the Circular Quay precinct to accommodate the increased crowds and also included managed access at popular sites including the Royal Botanic Gardens.

“Crowds were well behaved, and we appreciate the patience shown throughout the night.

“This year’s Vivid Sydney will run for an extra five nights, until next Saturday June 18. We encourage visitors to come earlier in the week and earlier in the evening to enjoy the festival when crowds are anticipated to be lighter.”

Conclusion

A lot of people wrote that they will not return to Vivid again after the near-crowd crush experience. I’m not surprised if they are first-time visitors and had no better time than to visit on the Long Weekend but it’s sad that it has tainted the event. This was a huge shambles and something has to be done. It was totally uncoordinated with no communication or plan. It more likely looks like they are taking the attitude that they will deal with it when it happens or are totally shifting responsibility on external security companies who just do what they do – guard. In regards to ferry queues – an annually complained problem, that problem can only be solved by making tickets pre-paid with all non-ticketholders taking other public transport. The huge crowds began in 2013 and has reached crisis point in 2016. Vivid hasn’t done enough. They need to do more otherwise everyone will be LIVID.

Were you there?

If you were stuck in the near-crowd crush particularly around the Moore Steps and like to provide more information, please contact us and also let Vivid Sydney know. This allows us both to provide better information to the public about the event as well as allow Vivid Sydney to plan better for next year.

P.S If you think all social media posts of this incident are in this article, you are wrong. There were many, many more….

Update (16/06/2016): 5 days after the initial Moore Steps near-crowd crush, 1 media organisation finally reported the Moore Steps near-crowd crush. That articles mainly notes that they will incraese police resources for the final 2 days of Vivid. In my opinion, this won’t solve the problem because firstly, there were police at the original 2 near-crushes but were uncoordinated so coordinating police with a ‘crowd crush plan’ would be the 1st thing to solve and secondly, more police equals less space. The problem is a lack of space not a lack of police. Vivid needs to increase space and distribution of the crowds within that increased space but not in uniconic spaces like Chatswood or Central Park but more like the one-way loop concept I proposed which passes heaps of iconic places. The article also quotes a Destination New South Wales spokesperson saying “use public transport to avoid any bottlenecks”. This was terribly worded advice as public transport means ferries & trains and where is the main ferry/train stop at Vivid?  – Circular Quay – where the near-crowd crushes and most bottlenecks are occurring. I’m not saying do not use public transport – just do not hop off at Circular Quay on expected crowded nights until they solve the crowd problem.

‘Vivid Sydney’ Powers On After Wild Weekend Weather

Vivid Sydney is back up & is powering on tonight with its world famous light projections & art installations illuminating the city from 6pm after being disrupted over the weekend by Sydney’s wild weather.

Destination New South Wales Chief Executive Officer & Vivid Sydney Executive Producer, Ms Sandra Chipchase, said “Vivid Sydney will resume tonight with more than 92% of installations in Circular Quay reopening to the public. Vivid Sydney’s priority is always the safety of its patrons & I’m delighted to see the festival will welcome visitors again tonight”

Light projections on the Sydney Opera House, Sydney Harbour Bridge, Customs House, Museum Of Contemporary Art & Cadmans Cottage will be fully operational. These will be joined by another 50 installations throughout Circular Quay, The Rocks & Walsh Bay.

Vivid Sydney precincts at Chatswood, The Galeries, Westfield, Martin Place, Darling Harbour & the Australian National Maritime Museum will also be lit tonight. The illuminated trail of giant animal multimedia light sculptures at Taronga Zoo will reopen with most installations fully functioning.

Although most Vivid precincts & installations will shine come 6pm, repairs are still underway to a few installations & projections damaged during the weekend’s storms. Unfortunately, the Royal Botanic Gardens, with its crowd-pleasing installation Cathedral Of Light, remains weather affected & will not reopen until tomorrow (7th of June).

Ms Chipchase said “We would like to thank all of Vivid Sydney’s fans for their patience and understanding & apologise to those visitors who had their plans disrupted over the weekend”

“Vivid Sydney will run through to Saturday the 18th of June so there’s still many nights left to visit Vivid Sydney. Vivid Sydney’s staff & volunteers will be back on site to welcome you to the world’s largest festival of light, music & ideas” she said.

Vivid Music & Vivid Ideas events were unaffected by the weather and continue to proceed as scheduled & visitors are encouraged to leave the car at home and use public transport.

For more updates, visit the festival website, www.vividsydney.com & follow Vivid Sydney at www.facebook.com/vividsydney and www.twitter.com/vividsydney.

Media Release: Vivid Sydney

Postpone Your Trip To ‘Vivid Sydney’ – Festival Impacted By Extreme Weather Conditions On Sunday the 5th of June

Due to the continuing extreme weather conditions including heavy rain, flash flooding & high winds that are currently impacting Sydney, visitors are once again being urged to postpone their visit to Vivid Sydney until weather conditions improve.

The festival’s light projections on the Sydney Opera House, Sydney Harbour Bridge, Customs House & at Central Park and Chatswood will be operating. However, the majority of the Vivid Light locations will not be switched on this evening including Taronga Zoo, Martin Place, Darling Harbour, the Royal Botanic Gardens & the majority of lighting installations around Circular Quay, The Rocks and Walsh Bay.

Vivid Sydney events that will proceed as scheduled today include the Bjork Digital exhibition at Carriageworks, light projections at Central Park, indoor precincts The Galeries and Westfield Sydney, the Vivid Ideas sessions & Vivid Music events.

Destination New South Wales Chief Executive Officer & Vivid Sydney Executive Producer, Sandra Chipchase, said “Vivid Sydney’s priority is always the safety of its patrons & with this in mind, we need to close some of the festival precincts and light installations this Sunday night & we encourage visitors to postpone their trip until the weather improves. We want to thank Vivid Sydney fans for their patience & understanding as we continue to manage the impact of this weekend’s extreme weather”

“The festival will run through to Saturday the 18th of June so there’s still around 2 more weeks to visit Vivid Sydney once the weather improves” Ms Chipchase said.

For more updates, visit the festival website, www.vividsydney.com & follow Vivid Sydney at www.facebook.com/vividsydney and www.twitter.com/vividsydney.

Media Release: Vivid Sydney

Weather Conditions Affect ‘Vivid Sydney’ Operations On Saturday The 4th Of June

Due to severe weather warnings & localised flooding, visitors are being urged to postpone their trip to Vivid Sydney tonight.

Although the projections on the Sydney Opera House, Customs House & the lighting of the Sydney Harbour Bridge will go ahead, the majority of the other lighting installations around Circular Quay & Martin Place will not be operating.

Strong winds overnight have damaged several light installations including one of this year’s crowd favourites, the Cathedral Of Light at the Royal Botanic Gardens.

The Bureau Of Meteorology predictions of king tides & damaging winds may cause further impact to some art installations & hoardings, posing a threat to public safety. Lighting installations at First Fleet Park, the Museum Of Contemporary Art, Martin Place, Darling Harbour, Taronga Zoo & the Royal Botanic Gardens precincts will not be activated this evening. Activations at Chatswood are likely to be scaled down.

Destination NSW Chief Executive Officer & Vivid Sydney Executive Producer, Sandra Chipchase, said “We apologise for any inconvenience but the number 1 priority is public safety”

“Vivid Sydney will go ahead in the indoor precincts at Westfield Sydney & The Galeries where the Perspectives installation brings together some of the most prominent video artists to create an immersive galaxy of colour, light & movement.”

“Vivid Sydney still has another 14 nights to run, so we suggest visitors delay their trip until weather conditions improve” Ms Chipchase said.

Visitors are urged to check the Vivid Sydney website for updates over the weekend, should weather conditions continue to affect the festival.

Vivid Music & Vivid Ideas events will proceed as scheduled.

For more updates, visit the event’s website: vividsydney.com.

Media Release: Vivid Sydney

Vivid Sydney’s Glow Takes Over The City

World’s largest festival of light, music and ideas kicks off in Sydney

Sydney, Australia is awash with colour this evening as more than 90 light installations light up the city for the annual Vivid Sydney festival, projecting colourful art on the world-famous Sydney Harbour Bridge, Sydney Opera House & throughout the city. Vivid Sydney officially opens tonight, the 27th of May, & runs for 23 nights until the 18th of June 2016.

Vivid Sydney is the world’s largest festival of light, music and ideas. More than 150 artists from 23 countries have created the light installations and projections that appear in more than eight Vivid Sydney precincts spread across Sydney. Vivid Sydney also features 195 Vivid Music events and more than 500 speakers appearing at Vivid Idea talks and forums.

The New South Wales (NSW) Government’s Premier Mike Baird said “Tonight thousands of people have visited Sydney to witness the amazing Vivid ‘Lights-On’ moment. For the next 23 nights, Sydney’s most iconic landmarks will be lit up in a symphony of colour and movement, attracting visitors from across the world. Vivid is a creative festival for a global audience and its popularity is evident in the 1.7 million visitors who attended last year’s festival.”

This year, Vivid Sydney will celebrate Australian Indigenous culture with the Songlines projection appearing on the sails of the iconic Sydney Opera House. The spectacular animation showcases the work of 6 renowned Indigenous artists: Karla Dickens, Djon Mundine OAM, Reko Rennie, Gabriella Possum Nungurrayi, Donny Woolagoodja and the late Gulumbu Yunipingu. Co-curated by Destination NSW and the Sydney Opera House, Songlines speaks directly to the spirituality and culture of Australia’s First Peoples, depicting the interconnected sharing systems and the trade routes that weave through time and distance, earth and sky.

With other major 3D projections appearing on the façade of the Museum of Contemporary Art Australia, and Customs House, Vivid Sydney showcases Sydney as a hub for the creative industries, with world-first technologies and design used to create the stunning spectacle of light.

Darling Harbour’s Laser-Dragon Water-Theatre features a world-first water-screen mounted on a 13 metre robotic arm floating high above 56 fountains. Laser-Dragon Water-Theatre show includes 4 video projected water-screens on which dancers will be projected moving to a music score created by The Presets. Visitors will be astonished by forty 20m-high vertical fountains, sixteen 25m-high moving fountains, twenty 15m-high flame jets and ten powerful lasers. In another world first at Darling Harbour, visitors will be able to scan and project their own face onto the water screen, through the use of Intel RealSense™ technology.

World-famous Sydney Harbour will be showcased to the world with the Sydney Harbour Bridge illuminated by 1,640 lighting fixtures tubes, containing 72,000 individual LEDs, and 6,700 individuals LEDS in 140 Cans as part of the Dress Circle installation which allows visitors to literally control the colour of the Sydney Harbour Bridge. Sydney Harbour Ferries will also be illuminated with up to 1,480m of LED tape to light up their journey across the Harbour.

Vivid Sydney stretches across the city with the Vivid Light Walk, starting at the Sydney Opera House, taking in the harbourside of the Royal Botanic Gardens celebrating its 200th anniversary, and following the waterfront to Walsh Bay. Illuminations and projections appear in Sydney’s Martin Place, Darling Harbour and the Australian National Maritime Museum, and Vivid Sydney’s first indoor precinct at The Galeries in the city’s CBD. The precincts of Central Park and Chatswood have also become a vibrant nighttime playground, as well as Taronga Zoo where illuminated lanterns will represent critical species to celebrate the Zoo’s 100th anniversary.

Destination NSW CEO & Executive Producer of Vivid Sydney, Sandra Chipchase, said “Vivid Sydney has again delivered remarkable technical and artistic world-firsts as part of Vivid Light. Our biggest ever Vivid Sydney program will deliver an impressive line-up of music acts from punk rockers to global superstars, up-and-coming homegrown talent, cabaret legends and more. This matched by a diverse program of social trend disrupters, including Jenji Kohan, Spike Jonze, Beau Willimon and Margaret Zhang, who appear as part of Vivid Ideas talks and forum series. Vivid Sydney 2016 is truly a celebration of innovation and creativity.”

To help visitors make the most of the biggest Vivid Sydney yet, Destination NSW offers some suggestions of the many festival highlights:

Light

  1. Stomp your way around a pre-historic, Bio-kinetic city at Chatswood where you will find an amazing collection of installations and activities inspired by the animals of Gondwana.
  2. Profess your love for your significant other, or hot date at I LOVE YOU, a giant illuminated heartshaped ‘love-o-meter’ that glows brighter the louder people say ‘I love you’ into the microphone.
  3. Stroll through the Garden Of Light at the Royal Botanic Garden Sydney and visit Sentiment Cocoon, an interactive installation that visitors can touch that will express human emotion through light.
  4. Be The Light For The Wild at Vivid Sydney’s wildest precinct, Taronga Zoo where visitors can make the interactive chameleon lantern change colour & watch the giant platypus lantern swim.
  5. Take some time out along the Vivid Light Walk & lie down under the multi-sensory artwork, Osmose, where shards of light will wash over you.

Music

  1. Catch a gig at Vivid LIVE with powerful, boundary pushing artists including New Order, Bon Iver Anohni all performing exclusive Sydney shows at Sydney Opera House from 27 May.
  2. Find your 80’s groove at the Enmore Theatre on 29 May as The Models, Machinations and Dave Mason from The Reels take to the stage.
  3. Enjoy a festival-like afternoon of acoustic, electronic, improvised and composed music on 29 May from 3pm at the Sydney Conservatorium Of Music.
  4. Jump around to Drapht, ALLDAY and Sydney’s own Spit Syndicate at Come Together festival at Sydney’s Luna Park on Saturday June 11.
  5. Be amazed at Avant-Cabaret where Sydney’s finest, most flamboyant cabaret artists including Jeff Duff, Mikelangelo, and Zsa Zsa La Fine will perform at The Kings Cross Hotel.

Ideas

  1. Get some inspiration and fashion advice from digital game-changer Margaret Zhang at Vivid Ideas on 28 May.
  2. Meet the Persuaders at the Museum of Contemporary Art on 31 May. Hear from panelists Phillip Adams, Dee Madigan, Michelle Law, Tim Levinson and Yassmin Abdel-Magied who have used their good ideas to successfully influence others.
  3. Celebrate all things handmade and meet local crafters, collectors, artisans and designers from etsy.com at the Etsy Sydney Made Market on 4 June.
  4. Don’t miss the hugely popular Robowars showdown on 5 June. Robots big and small, built by hand from metal, power tools and remote-controlled toy parts will fight against each other in the ultimate test of man and machine.
  5. Catch a film at the 63rd Sydney Film Festival from 8 June. Each year, the Festival brings the best new films from around the world to audiences with over 300 screenings.

Vivid Sydney is owned, managed and produced by Destination NSW, the State Government’s tourism and major events agency. In 2015 it attracted 1.7 million visitors and delivered more than $63 million in visitor expenditure to the local economy.

Media Release: Vivid Sydney

‘Boy George’ Joins ‘Vivid Music’ Program With Exclusive DJ Set In Sydney

Vivid Music, part of Vivid Sydney has announced international pop-icon Boy George will perform an exclusive disc jockey (DJ) set on the rooftop terrace of Darling Harbour’s Café Del Mar on 12 June.

Vivid Sydney is the world’s largest festival of light, music and ideas & features 195 music events. This will be Boy George’s only DJ performance in Australia and limited to 500 tickets, available to purchase from ticketbooth, here.

Vivid Music curator, Stephen Ferris, said “Boy George is universally recognised as one of the world’s most iconic pop artists. It is exciting to add this internationally acclaimed artist to the diverse and comprehensive Vivid Music line-up.”

“The Vivid Music program continues to expand every year showcasing international music artists including Bjork and New Order, as well as local legends Archie Roach and Don Walker. It is a program that offers something for everyone from rock, pop and cabaret, to dance music, and hip hop and I encourage all visitors to get out to venues across the city over the next few weeks to experience these events.”

Boy George said “I’m so excited to be performing alongside these amazing Sydney light shows. I’ve seen the photography from across the globe so it’s going to be a special moment for me.”

The exclusive DJ set will be performed at Café del Mar which offers a perfect viewing spot to see Vivid Sydney overlooking Darling Harbour where guests can enjoy the Harbour installations whilst watching and dancing Boy George.

The Vivid Music program features music performances across 28 venues, with over 1300 hours of music for visitors to experience.

Vivid Sydney is owned, managed and produced by Destination NSW, the State Government’s tourism and major events agency. In 2015 it attracted 1.7 million visitors and delivered more than $63 million in visitor expenditure to the local economy.

Event Details:

  • What: Rodd Richards Presents & T1000 Events in conjunction with Vivid Sydney present An Intimate Afternoon With Boy George.
  • When: Sunday, 12 June 12pm – 10pm
  • Where: Café del Mar, Darling Harbour
  • Support: Kate Monroe, Johnny Gleeson, Mark Dynamix Husky Rodd Riches featuring Arnott Olssen
  • Tickets: On sale midday Friday 27 May at www.ticketbooth.com.au.

Attendees can choose between General Admission, Vivid Dining Packages or get the entire VIP Experience.

‘Songlines’ To Iluminate The Sydney Opera House Sails For ‘Vivid’

6 artists to feature in the 1st Indigenous ‘Lighting Of The Sails’ at Vivid Sydney

Australia’s ancient songlines will weave across the sails of the Sydney Opera House from 6pm on 27 May as part of the first Indigenous Lighting Of The Sails at Vivid Sydney, in a spectacular animation co-curated by Destination NSW & the Sydney Opera House.

Songlines is inspired by the ancient dreaming tracks that weave across the landscape and skies, featuring the work of six renowned Indigenous artists: Karla Dickens, Djon Mundine OAM, Reko Rennie, Gabriella Possum, Donny Woolagoodja & the late Gulumbu Yunipingu.

Songlines Director & Sydney Opera House Head Of Indigenous Programming Rhoda Roberts says: “The songlines have been connecting Australian Aboriginal people for thousands of years. Songlines is a monumental work and an unprecedented opportunity for people around the world to really connect with the culture of Australia’s First People and glimpse the old trade routes that connected us all to country.”

“The songlines are a living map and an archive of our culture. These pieces of art bring an entirely new look to the Opera House – steeped in tradition but so contemporary and relevant today. I simply cannot wait to see it unveiled during Vivid Sydney.”

Vivid Sydney Creative Director Ignatius Jones says: “It is an honour to have these artists sharing such a profound cultural story of Australia’s Aboriginal people through Songlines at Vivid Sydney.”

“Each year Vivid Sydney showcases art and innovation, and cutting-edge animation has been utilised to bring the Songlines projection to life. By placing Songlines on our most significant cultural icon, we put Indigenous art at the heart of Australian culture and showcase this amazing story to visitors across the world.”

The music accompanying Songlines is composed and designed by Rhoda Roberts & Damien Robinson, the creative force behind Sydney’s Wicked Beat Sound System & features songmen Djakapurra Munyarryun and Cecil McLeod. The music explores the themes of salt water, fresh water, sky, wind and the desert.

That has a particular resonance on Bennelong Point, known to the Gadigal for thousands of years as Tubowgule, which means where the knowledge waters meet. Songlines honours Tubowgule’s rich history as a gathering place for community, ceremony, songs, storytelling and celebration.

Contemporary Indigenous visual artists from across the country interpret the songlines through distinctive symbols, patterning and imagery representative of the stories of their clans and groups.

Songlines has been animated for the Opera House sails by award-winning studio Artists In Motion. A tapestry of moving images tracing the songlines from the east, across the centre, to the north & to the west of the country will be projected in a breathtaking display.

Charged with being a meeting place for matters of local, national and international significance, the Sydney Opera House continues the traditions of its site on Bennelong Point through a year-round program celebrating the richness of First Nations culture through dance, music and talks events.

Songlines will run each night from 6pm to 11pm from 27 May to 18 June. Vivid LIVE, the Sydney Opera House’s annual contemporary music takeover, runs from 27 May to 13 June.

Media Release: Vivid Sydney

Graze Before You Gaze – What’s On The Menu At ‘Vivid Sydney’

With over 80 light installations to see, more than 170 creative ideas talks to be inspired by & eclectic music performances at over 22 venues across the city, there is no denying that experiencing Vivid Sydney will make you hungry. Thankfully, as Sydney lights up from the 27th of May to the 18th of June, food retailers have prepared a delicious offering of Vivid Sydney-inspired food & beverages that will satisfy visitors’ appetites all over the city.

New South Wales (NSW) Minister for Trade, Tourism & Major Events, Stuart Ayres, said “Vivid Sydney is set to once again delight visitors with some of Sydney’s hippest purveyors of food and beverage presenting a smorgasbord of Vivid-inspired treats that showcase our city’s world-class food and wine culture. With so much to choose from, foodies can even plan their own Vivid Sydney dining trail to ensure they’re not only experiencing the best light, music and ideas, but they’re also tasting the best cocktails, market food, and gelato. It’s the perfect addition for a night out at Vivid Sydney.”

Here are 14 of the many unique food and beverage experiences on offer at Vivid Sydney:

  1. This year for the first time at Vivid Sydney, two Sydney based production powerhouses, Motti+Smith and Paper Moose have collaborated to bring Martin Place their very own 8 Bits+Bytes burger activation. Throughout the festival, 5 of Sydney’s best burger houses including Mary’s, Milk Bar by Café ish, Pub Life Kitchen, Bang Bang Sammy’s Burger Bar will be making visitors burger dreams come true. Themed like the inside of a vintage arcade game, visitors will be able to vote for their favourite burger in an interactive burger battle which will be tallied in realtime on a digital score board.
  2. For Vivid Sydney 2016, the ground-breaking Songlines will showcase ancient Aboriginal stories on the Sydney Opera House sails. In keeping with this year’s stunning Lighting Of The Sails, restaurants across the Opera House will celebrate Australia’s rich culinary heritage with uniquely local ingredients. Opera Bar will serve oyster shots enriched with Indigenous berries and herbs for vibrant colouring, with ‘bush tucker’, including fingerlimes, lemon myrtle & smoked macadamia nuts. Colourful cocktails, a GIF photo booth, projections and lights will add to the playful Vivid Sydney festival atmosphere.
  3. Carriageworks are hosting a series of bespoke dining experiences called Sydney Table, created by Sydney’s leading forces in food and creative industries. At each dinner, 50 guests will be treated to an evening designed and prepared by some of Australia’s most exciting talents from the fields of food, music, art and design. The line-up includes Sam Miller from Silvereye & artist Lisa Madigan. For the full program & ticketing information, visit: http://www.vividsydney.com/event/music/sydney-table
  4. Visitors can chow down in Chatswood ahead of previewing the vibrant WildLight – The Bio-Kinetic City installations. Throughout Vivid Sydney at Chatswood, the precinct will have market stalls in the Mall, food trucks on Anderson Street, and the new Asian inspired Hawker lane in Westfield Chatswood. At Chatswood Interchange visitors can enjoy a meal at Chatswood’s newest dining precinct, The District, open daily until 11pm. The Concourse, and Chatswood Chase will also offer food options galore with restaurants, desert bars, and coffee shops.
  5. At the Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney, visitors can sit down, relax and unwind at Busby’s Bar for a Tyrrell’s Wine & a bite to eat as they take in the spectacular light installations and join in their 200th birthday celebrations. For those on the move, Busby’s Bites will offer a delicious range of food from gourmet cheese toasty’s, beef brisket or lamb shoulder rolls, to heart-warming soups. There are also sweet treats on offer with hot mini doughnuts and Liquid Lindt chocolate shots. Busby’s Bar is named after James Busby, who collected vine cuttings from Europe that were planted in the Garden in 1833 which were critical to the evolution of the Australian wine industry of today. Busby’s Bar & Busby’s Bites will be open from 6pm – 11pm every night during Vivid Sydney.
  6. This year, The Galeries will bring Vivid Sydney indoors with impressive installations lighting up the centre. As visitors explore the dazzling Perspectives installation they can enjoy fine dining until 10pm at The ArtHouse Hotel, Graffiti Italian Ristorante, Lotus & Sushi Hotaru to name but a few.
  7. At Westfield Sydney, the Enchanted Forest installation offers a perfect backdrop to diners on level 5 & 6 of the centre. The food court includes a variety of cusines such as delicious dumplings from Tim Ho Wan & Din Tai Fung with late night bites open to the public until 9pm from Thursday to Saturday.
  8. 12 Squares at Central Park will have a pop-up bar located next to Chippendale Green offering the perfect spot for visitors to sit back with a drink & enjoy the impressive projections. The lower ground dining district offers an alfresco dining experience with soulful Asian comfort food from Ippudo, traditional fall off the bone ribs and indulgent burgers from Ribs & Burgers, all offering family friendly outlets that could feed an army.
  9. Chef Peter Gilmore’s menu at Bennelong at the Sydney Opera House celebrates the abundant flavours and diversity of Australian produce, and no dish highlights this more than the locally sourced red claw yabbies from Mandandanji country in South West Queensland, served with lemon jam, cultured cream and buckwheat pikelets. The Bennelong Billy, an Aussie rum-based cocktail with river mint, quandong liqueur & strawberry gum served over crushed ice will also be on offer during Vivid Sydney.
  10. Showcasing the very best producers and chefs from across Sydney and regional NSW, The Night Market at Carriageworks will be Sydney’s first large scale immersive contemporary food and wine event. Curated by Carriageworks Farmers Market Creative Director, Mike McEnearney, these markets on 4 June & 18 June will feature over 50 stallholders including Young Henry’s, Archie Rose Distillery, Icebergs, PortenoCornersmith to name but a few.
  11. As the lights come on, the Eat Drink, Western Foyers heaters will turn up at the Sydney Opera House, ready to serve winter warmers featuring a selection of award-winning NSW wine & produce, carefully curated by Chef Lauren Murdoch. Visitors can sample Palmer’s Island mulloway with roast tomato sauce, saffron potato & rouille or for those on the go, a pop-up on the Forecourt will serve Lozzie’s Hot Dogs, jaffles, soup & other family-friendly food and drinks.
  12. The team behind TiosThe Cliff Dive are back in a perfect haze with the hotly anticipated return of the Deep Purple Pool Hall pop-up bar at the Sydney Opera House. This hidden speak-easy is likened to a piece of Americana flotsam washed up on Sydney Harbour. Guests will follow the 8-ball up the western stairs to discover a unique bar, run by ARIA Catering. The venue is about juxtaposing high & low culture, bringing artisanal beer & wine from some of Australia’s smallest & best producers to the domain of opera & sparkling wine.
  13. 1 burger is never enough, so Blackstar Pastry, Little Marionette & N2 Extreme Gelato have teamed up to create ice cream burgers in Martin Place. For those visitors not boarding the burger bandwagon, other on-site food offerings include Bar Pho & Sandweesh. Martin Place will host a pop-up bar on-site serving Young Henry’s Beer, 4 Pines Beer, Batlow Cider James Estate Hunter Valley Wines.
  14. Parked trucks with scrumptious foodie treats will line Hickson Road Reserve throughout Vivid Sydney serving meals from the likes of Happy As Larry, Urban Pasta & Agape Organic. The City Of Sydney Food Trucks will rotate throughout the festival & will offer everything from yum cha favourites to New York-style pastrami sandwiches, organic pizzas, soft tacos & gourmet bangers and burgers. The trucks are a great place to grab a quick meal to take with you as you stroll around the famous Light Walk.

Owned managed and produced by the NSW Government’s tourism and major events agency Destination NSW, Vivid Sydney is set to once again transform the city into a colourful canvas of light, music & ideas for 23 nights from the 27th of May to the 18th of June. For more information, visit www.vividsydney.com.

Media Release: Vivid Sydney

New-Look Vivid Sydney Application To Help Festival Goers Move Around

Visitors to the world’s largest festival of light, music & ideas are being encouraged to download the new-look Vivid Sydney smartphone application to find their way around the stunning precincts & events featured in the 2016 program.

Minister For Trade, Tourism & Major Events, Stuart Ayres, said Vivid Sydney has an expanded footprint with new precincts & visitors can use the application to browse and discover all of Vivid Sydney’s light installations & music and ideas events.

“The 23-day festival, set to run from 27 May to 18 June, features more than 80 light installations, 1,500 hours of programmed music events and 170 creative events,” Mr Ayres said.

“This app is a fantastic way to interact with our biggest festival yet, with so many fantastic light installations and projections, music & ideas events. The app includes Vivid Trails, bringing Vivid Sydney to life with itineraries exploring different precincts, light walks & types of events.”

Destination NSW Chief Executive Officer & Executive Producer Of Vivid Sydney, Sandra Chipchase, said the app will be a must-have addition for visitors keen to experience as much of Vivid Sydney as possible.

“The app features maps conveniently matching visitors’ current location with nearby installations and events, making moving around Vivid Sydney even easier,” Ms Chipchase said.

“Users can also save their favourite light installations, events and precincts and speakers with a My Vivid log-in feature. This year we are also very excited about the new precinct additions to Vivid Sydney, with the festival welcoming The Galeries, Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney & Taronga Zoo giving visitors even more opportunities to experience this fantastic event.”

Visitors coming to Vivid Sydney are being encouraged to leave the car at home and use public transport, including 3,200 extra bus services and over 600 extra train services running in addition to the regular timetable services.

Vivid Sydney is owned, managed and produced by the NSW Government’s tourism and major events agency Destination NSW and runs from the 27th of May to the 18th of June.

The free Vivid Sydney app is now available on Google Play and iTunes stores. For more information, visit www.vividsydney.com.

Media Release: Vivid Sydney

‘Vivid Sydney’ With Kids: Top Tips For Family Friendly Fun

Already a firm favourite on the winter calendar, Vivid Sydney has even more in store for families this year including the chance to walk with dinosaurs, a record number of light installations, new locations to explore & an additional 5 days to pack it all into.

With the world’s largest festival of light, music & ideas set to run from the 27th of May to the 18th of June, Vivid Sydney organisers are encouraging families with children to visit early in the week & early in the evening to avoid late finishes for littlies.

Minister for Trade, Tourism and Major Events Stuart Ayres said: “Vivid Sydney ticks all the right boxes for parents – it’s family-friendly, fun, and mostly free. With this year’s festival set to run for 23 days, families will have more time to take in the growing number of attractions and locations for this much loved event, and to visit more than once for the ultimate Vivid Sydney experience.”

Destination New South Wales (NSW) Chief Executive Officer & Vivid Sydney Executive Producer, Ms Sandra Chipchase said, “Vivid Sydney is magical for children of any age. We urge visiting and local families to come early and come often to enjoy the spectacle.”

Top tips for families to enjoy Vivid Sydney:

  • Come early in the week – it’s quieter Monday to Wednesday; and busiest on Friday & Saturday.
  • Arrive early in the evening – before the crowds grow & kids grow tired.
  • Come back – don’t try & fit everything into 1 visit.
  • Travel by public transport – leave the car at home and take advantage of extra bus, train and ferry services during the festival.
  • Come prepared – plan your visits beforehand. Vivid Sydney precinct and accessibility maps including transport options and activities can be downloaded at vividsydney.com

The best family fun for all ages:

0-5 years

  • Join the dinosaurs at WildLight – The BioKinetic City – Step off the bus or train at Chatswood and discover a world of digital dinosaurs featuring 3D animations of prehistoric creatures playing at The Concourse. Join in by taking control of mechanical dinosaur frames at the Exoskelton Encounter created by puppetry masters, Erth. Victoria Street, Chatswood
  • Electric Jellyfish – Venture inside the spectacular dome and pluck, bounce or wobble electric light rings to create your own light and sound jellyfish – and watch it float across the surface. Museum Of Sydney
  • Be The Light for the Wild – Taronga Zoo lights up with giant, interactive animal lanterns ranging from the magnificent Asian elephant to the brightly coloured Corroboree frog. Families can interact with the larger-than-life lanterns which change colour and make sound in spectacular fashion.
  • Sydney’s Hidden Stories at Customs House – A blue-tongue lizard leads a journey through enchanted forests with witches, snakes, cockatoos, gnomes and gumnut fairies in an aweinspiring projection on the grand sandstone façade of Customs House. Customs House, Alfred Street, Circular Quay
  • Cathedral Of Light – Take little ones on a mesmerising walk through a 70 metre long, eight metre high tunnel made from tens of thousands of LED lights in The Royal Botanic Gardens. Enter through Queen Elizabeth II Gates via the Opera House forecourt. Royal Botanic Gardens
  • VIVID HOT TIP: Vivid Sydney at Chatswood and Taronga Zoo lights up at 5.30pm, so Vivid’s youngest visitors can get an early start (and finish).

6-10 years

  • Spectrum – The kids can put their own creative stamp on this interactive light sculpture by tilting a line of multicoloured rods to form unique colour and pattern combinations. The Rocks
  • Shadow Wall – Your shadow has never looked so bright! Watch your shadow come to life as a multicoloured silhouette as the interactive walls mirrors your movements. Circular Quay
  • Dress Circle – The kids haven’t coloured in like this before. Add colour, light and patterns to the Circular Quay skyline using a 3D, touch-sensitive model – and see your creation light up Vivid Sydney in real time. Circular Quay
  • IMPOSSIBLE Voyage – Take an interactive ride to strange and mysterious lands as one of Sydney’s oldest buildings is transformed into an imaginary vessel. Create a unique family journey as the light art responds to your movements, transporting you through changing landscapes. Cadman’s Cottage, The Rocks
  • Silent Disco – Sshhh! The kids can burn off energy dancing to music that you don’t have to listen to! They simply pick up a set of headphones, select an audio channel and hit the dance floor with music only they can hear. Central Park (Friday and Saturday, 6pm – 9:30pm)
  • VIVID HOT TIP: Take advantage of Vivid Sydney accommodation deals and stay near the action. Choosing a location near the city centre, Darling Harbour, Pyrmont or North Sydney will make it easy to visit multiple precincts – and give the kids easy access to other attractions during the day.

11+ years

  • Laser-Dragon Water-Theatre – Big action for big kids. 4 video-projected water-screens, 56 fountains, 22 flame jets and 10 powerful lasers create awe-inspiring forms and effects including ferocious dragons and laughing clowns on the waterfront at Darling Harbour. Darling Harbour
  • Sound Bubble – A huge, transparent, inflatable cube with an artificial brain senses when visitors approach and reacts by sending out colourful light patterns and sound effects. The bigger the crowd, the grander the display. Circular Quay
  • U-Tube – Your family can leave a mark at this interactive sculpture, literally. You’ll form coloured shapes on the wall and leave an imprint by pushing your face, hands or whole body against the surface. Circular Quay
  • Robowars returns – for one day only. Robots big and small and built by hand from metal, power tools and toy parts battle it out in an epic showdown on 5 June. Tickets are limited. Visit www.vividsydney.com for details. Circular Quay
  • VIVID HOT TIP: Grab a front row seat to enjoy the spectacular Laser-Dragon Water-Theatre at Darling Harbour by dining at one of the restaurants along the promenade or get takeaway from the fresh food outlets/ food trucks & find a spot to watch the action on the water.

Vivid Sydney is the world’s largest festival of light, music and ideas, which for 23 days – from the 27th of May to the 18th of June 2016 – transforms the Harbour City with its colourful creative canvas. Now in its 8th year, Vivid Sydney is owned, managed and produced by Destination NSW, the NSW Government’s tourism and major events agency. Vivid Sydney features large scale light installations and projections (Vivid Light); music performances and collaborations (Vivid Music including Vivid LIVE At The Sydney Opera House); and creative ideas, discussion and debate (Vivid Ideas), all celebrating Sydney as the creative hub of the Asia-Pacific.

For more information visit www.vividsydney.com.

Media Release: Vivid Sydney