Picture: London Oktoberfest
April 21, 2025
Hammersmith and Fulham Council is looking to allow for more events in a central Hammersmith park to bring in additional income. It has applied to vary its licence at St Paul’s Green to extend its hours and remove an existing limit on when it can be used. Currently the licence is only available for one Thursday, Friday and Saturday in October a year for the Oktoberfest which has run since 2011.
In its application, the council, which is also the licensing authority, wrote that more regular events ‘brings extra income into the council budget and choice of events for residents’. Hammersmith and Fulham Council was approached for comment.
The existing licence for St Paul’s Green, which is on Hammersmith Bridge Road by the flyover and St Paul’s Hammersmith Church, allows events between 5pm and 11pm Thursday and Friday and 11am to 11pm on Saturday, though limited to the October days. The requested variation would see the limit removed plus an extension of the hours to 11am to 11pm seven days a week.
A representation by the Barclay Road Residents group was filed objecting to the proposal, noting concerns including the location of the park by the Hammersmith flyover. It wrote, “In theory this might not sound too bad but in practice it could turn into all sorts of things that perhaps are not in the interest of crowd safety, public safety, safeguarding and thus the licensing objectives could be severely undermined and not promoted by either the licence holder or its third and fourth parties contracting out for the event management, event safety, etc.”
The pack for next week’s (23 April) Licensing Sub-Committee meeting, at which the item is to be discussed, includes a letter from Licensing Compliance Officer Lorna McKenna sent to the residents group.
In the letter, Ms McKenna wrote the request for a licence covering Monday to Sunday is to provide greater flexibility, and that the council is not looking to run events attracting more than 499 people ‘that frequently’.
She added the conditions attached to the application had been agreed with the Police Licensing Team ahead of submission, and that events held at the park, such as last year’s Oktoberfest, require an Event Management Plan to ensure issues such as access are resolved.
“The new licence would allow events to run for over 499 people where space permits,” she wrote. “We are limited as to what we can deliver in our parks in the wetter months and this hard standing area is a very central location where we can offer a wider events programme to the community and protect our public green spaces during winter months.”
Ms McKenna also asked the group if they wished to withdraw their representation, having responded to the questions raised in their objection, or alternatively if they wished to propose any additional measures to address further concerns. This offer was however not taken up, and the representation remained.
Councils across London have been looking to their green spaces in an effort to boost income. Tower Hamlets Council approved plans to increase the capacity of events at Victoria Park from a minimum of 5,000 people to 20,000 at the end of 2023.
The issue is however often contentious, with Wandsworth earlier this year withdrawing applications to hold events on Wandsworth Common, Tooting Common and King George’s Park.
Ben Lynch - Local Democracy Reporter
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