Skip to main content

Let me hear you, Glastonbury! Oh, and the car park is this way

SRL takes on traffic management plan for world's largest greenfield music festival
By Adam Hill June 28, 2023 Read time: 3 mins
Glastonbury: quite busy (© Superjolly | Dreamstime.com)

The Glastonbury Festival in Somerset, England, is renowned for its ability to attract big-name stars to perform in the countryside: this year Lizzo, Guns N' Roses, Elton John, Kelis and Lana del Rey were among the acts on stage.

The festival is also renowned for being a logistical nightmare - with more than 200,000 visitors descending on the world’s largest greenfield music and performing arts event across a 900-acre site, negotiating motorways, railways, A-roads, buses and twisty country lanes to get there.

Step forward SRL, which provided Glastonbury Festival Events with a traffic management plan comprising a range of products - variable messaging signs (VMS), CCTV, ANPR cameras and workzone protection barriers - to smooth passage to the event for thousands of vehicles and people from 21-25 June 2023, and to minimise disruption for locals.

SRL’s business development director Iain McDonald explains: "This is by far our largest integrated project to date."

The company established a project planning team three months prior to the festival, making preparatory site visits and working with the customer to create a "bespoke, adaptable solution".

The team stayed on site before, during and after the event, working in the control room as part of the wider traffic management operation.

There they adapted VMS communications in response to the rapidly-evolving traffic flow, ensuring efficiency for organisers, visitors and other road users.      

SRL monitored external traffic using data generated by portable CCTV cameras. The cameras, VMS and security barriers were all solar-powered to preclude the need for battery changes, which the company said improved reliability and honoured the event’s “Leave No Trace” sustainability policy.

Up-to-date instructions were given to drivers on 32 Smart Messenger VMS, directing visitors along the best route to the four main entrances and public car parks around the eight-and-a-half mile festival perimeter.  

The signs also encouraged drivers to drive at a safe speed through the neighbouring village of Pilton and to advise those arriving at Castle Cary railway station of car park capacity.  

Smart and portable VMS were deployed before the event to manage traffic during set-up, and five Instaboom solar/hybrid workzone protection barriers coordinated with ANPR helped facilitate controlled access to specific sites. 

Within the festival grounds, Smart Portable Messager VMS were deployed to direct drivers to the 61 car parking fields and camping zones and to instruct them to drive slowly to minimise airborne dust; they also helped guide pedestrians to the different stages and events.

A spokesperson for Glastonbury Festival Events’ off-site team says: "[SRL] created a sophisticated, hands-on solution in support of the overall traffic management plan designed to safely, efficiently and sustainably help manage traffic to and within the site, while keeping non-festival traffic flowing well in the surrounding area. This is a critical part of the visitor experience and we’re really pleased with the work the company has completed.

Related Content

  • June 18, 2014
    Highways Agency awards maintenance contracts to telent
    Technology services company telent has won three prestigious five year contracts worth over US$25.4 million with the UK Highways Agency to maintain critical roadside technology across the east, south-east and M25 regions' motorways and trunk roads. telent now manages all routine and reactive maintenance for over 12,000 technology assets, such as emergency roadside telephones, message signs, traffic signal sites, the Highways Agency weather stations, CCTV cameras, tunnels and many more. The company’
  • March 28, 2018
    US DOTs introduce measures to stop wrong-way driving
    Wrong-way driving (WWD) is a remarkably innocuous term for incidents that all too often cause some of the worst accidents that emergency services have to deal with. Several US states are now taking steps to minimise the problem, as Alan Dron finds out. You’re driving down a highway at night when you see approaching headlights. You initially assume they are merely those of an oncoming car on the opposite carriageway. It’s only when they are within 200 yards or so that you realise that the other driver is in
  • June 21, 2016
    Keeping a close watch on ‘too-dangerous-to-drive’ highway
    Like many others, the authorities in Argentina implemented ITS to improve road safety – but this case was a little different to most as Mauro Nogarin explains. The 70km of highway that separate Argentina’s capital Buenos Aires from the city of La Plata had long been considered too dangerous for anyone to make the trip with a private car. Figures on criminal attacks and vandalism with stones, nails, logs, spark plugs or any other element that can damage a car’s tyres and cause them to stop in order rob th
  • February 12, 2021
    SRL unveils Wave and Wait pedestrian system
    Signals retain push-button functionality for users who are visually impaired