The changing fortunes of Liverpool’s Festival Gardens

Paul Burnell

BBC News, Liverpool

Chris Denny/Geograph People walk round flower beds on part of the exhibition site. Pathways and colourful flower beds can be seen across a green lawn. Chris Denny/Geograph

There were 60 gardens spread across the site, including Japanese and Indian-themed areas

Just over 40 years ago, a wasteland on Liverpool’s waterfront was transformed as part of a vision to regenerate the city in the aftermath of the Toxteth Riots.

About 90 acres (36 hectares) of former landfill and derelict dockland was turned into lush gardens and parkland in 1984 as part of a new public attraction, known as The International Garden Festival.

That was followed by a period of decline where the site fell into disrepair, until it was acquired by Liverpool City Council and £53m was spent to clean up the area.

A new vision to turn Festival Gardens into housing and a new public space has now been announced after a series of aborted attempts to sustain its legacy.

Liverpool City Council An aerial view of the landfill site where Festival Gardens used to be situated on Liverpool's waterfront. The site is a raised mound surrounded by trees, with homes and streets seen in the distance. Liverpool City Council

Parts of the gardens were restored in 2012, but other areas remain derelict

The site’s fortunes have ebbed and flowed like the River Mersey since the days when Conservative cabinet member Michael Heseltine [now Lord Heseltine] embarked on his ministerial crusade to revitalise Liverpool.

Margaret Thatcher’s government was urged to leave the city in a state of “managed decline” according to government files released in 2011 under the 30-year rule.

Queen Elizabeth II shakes hands with Blue Peter competition winner Theo Gayer Anderson at the festival opening with presenter Simon Groom in a beige suit.

Queen Elizabeth II opened the festival and met the winner of a Blue Peter art competition

Nicknamed the “Minister for Merseyside”, Heseltine championed the festival as one of the first major projects undertaken by the Merseyside Development Corporation, a body set up in the aftermath of the 1981 riots in Toxteth.

It was billed as “a five month pageant of horticultural excellence and spectacular entertainment”.

Built on a site in the old south docks area between the Dingle and Otterspool, much of the derelict wasteland needed to be cleared of industrial waste before landscaping could commence.

John Jennings/Geograph The replica of The Beatles Yellow Submarine from the eponymous movie with people on board it at the festival site in 1984.John Jennings/Geograph

The Yellow Submarine exhibit now based at Liverpool John Lennon Airport was displayed in the gardens in 1984

Opened by Queen Elizabeth II the festival area contained more than 60 individual gardens, a hall, public pavilions and a miniature railway that went around the site.

There was even a pub, The Britannia and a walk-of-fame type feature called the Pathway of Honour which recognised Liverpool entertainers including Cilla Black, Ken Dodd, and Nerys Hughes.

The festival, which ran from 2 May to 14 October 1984, was meant to have a lasting legacy of a unique riverside parkland “available for all to share”.

John Firth/Geograph The festival gardens mini railway complete with locomotive in the background and a bridge.John Firth/Geograph

Visitors were able to ride on a model railway around Festival Gardens

But the vision never matched the reality as the site changed hands several times with half of the original festival grounds now a residential housing development.

The Festival Dome was demolished in late 2006 to make way for development while the rest of the land cost up to £60m to clean up after it was bought by the council in 2016.

Former city mayor Joe Anderson revealed in 2017 he wanted to create a new open space for the public which could also host music, theatre and public art events.

But it was another false dawn because the land was used as a waste dump and the site needed to be cleaned up, work that took until 2023 to complete.

PA Media Michael Heseltine walks the streets of Liverpool accompanied by officialsPA Media

The festival was one of the first regeneration projects Lord Heseltine championed

The clean-up was described as the biggest remediation project in Europe, with more than £53m invested by the council, Homes England and the Liverpool City Region Combined Authority.

A new tender process was launched in 2024 to find developers for the site, with the intention of transforming the remaining land into housing and public space that reflect the vision of the original festival in 1984.

The project “could set the standard for sustainable housing developments in the UK”, a council spokesman said.

Chris Denny/Geograph Waterfall feature over rock structureChris Denny/Geograph

The festival had its own water feature among a variety of exhibits

Urban Splash and igloo Regeneration were chosen to oversee the project.

A plan to form a joint venture company with the two firms is set to be put forward for council approval in September.

Two Daleks and Blue Peter dog Goldie stand near some rocks on sand

One section of the festival was dedicated to Dr Who

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