Culture Festival fans arrive as Tomorrowland seeks solutions after stage...

Festival fans arrive as Tomorrowland seeks solutions after stage fire

-

- Advertisment -
ADVERTISEMENT

The first festivalgoers have been arriving at Dreamville, Tomorrowland’s official camping site, just hours after a fire destroyed the event’s main stage, its crown jewel, on Wednesday evening.

As widespread speculation spreads about the electronic dance music festival’s potential cancellation, there are still no clear answers. Tomorrowland organisers said calling off the event is “the last thing they want,” but they’re still searching for solutions.

The festival’s production and creative teams are working in close consultation with safety experts and government departments, Tomorrowland spokesperson Debby Wilmsen said on Thursday morning in an interview with Belgium’s Radio 1.

“It is too early to say exactly what we are going to be able to do, but we are going to have to come up with a creative solution. However, the fire and police departments have the last word when it comes to safety, and we always listen to that,” she noted.

The governor of the province of Antwerp, Cathy Berx, is still hopeful that the festival will go ahead as planned, Flemish public broadcaster VRT reported.

“I am confident that Tomorrowland, despite the terrible setback, will reconcile creativity with the safety of festival-goers and employees,” she said.

A team of 32 artists from 10 different countries brought the stage to life over the course of two years. The construction of the stage itself began at the end of May. No other stages or areas of the festival venue were impacted by the fire.

Tomorrowland wrote in a statement that the Orbyz Mainstage was a “creation from pure passion, imagination, and dedication.”

“This wasn’t just a stage. It was a living, breathing world.  From the very first sketch on a blank page, to countless hours of conceptual design, artistic collaboration, engineering, crafting, building, every single piece of Orbyz carried part of our soul,” the statement further read.

Tomorrowland is one of the world’s largest EDM festivals, attracting a global crowd of music lovers each year across two weekends. Last year’s edition welcomed 400,000 people.

No festival-goers were on site when the fire broke out and none of the roughly 1,000 employees were hurt while taking part in preparations for the opening weekend.

An investigation into the cause of the blaze is ongoing.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Latest news

Life-sized animal puppets complete 20,000km climate crisis journey

ADVERTISEMENT Back in April, a herd of towering, life-sized animal puppets - from elephants, giraffes, to antelopes and lions - set out from Kinshasa, in the Congo rainforest, on a hugely ambitious journey that would take them across two continents and 20,000km. Their migration - fictional but steeped in reality - was designed to mirror

Fire in the Mosque of Cordoba extinguished

ADVERTISEMENT A fire, reported shortly after 9 pm on Friday, affected the Mosque-Cathedral of Córdoba. The blaze began in the Patio de los Naranjos, near the Puerta de San José, prompting the evacuation of the area around Magistral González Francés Street to allow fire crews to carry out their work. According to the town's mayor

How the UK’s Green Man Festival has managed to stay independent

ADVERTISEMENT Amid the tranquil verdant hills of the Brecon Beacons in south Wales, one of Europe’s most special music festivals finds its home. While many festivals might turn their sites into cacophonous blurs of hedonism and noise, Green Man Festival is a little different.   Sure, there’s plenty of noise. After all, this year’s line-up includes

AI & memes: How the Trump administration engages in ‘memetic warfare’

ADVERTISEMENT The FBI arresting Barack Obama in the Oval Office. The devastated Gaza Strip turned into a luxury seaside resort. Donald Trump as the next Pope, a jedi, Superman or in Sydney Sweeney’s American Eagle jeans. If you have been online in recent months (chronically or no), chances are that you have come across these
- Advertisement -

Ready furr their close-up: How cats became catnip to cinema

ADVERTISEMENT The most unbelievable thing about 2024's A Quiet Place: Day One was not its premise of world-invading ultrasonic-hearing aliens, but rather that a cat in such a situation wouldn’t have everyone within its vicinity immediately killed by tapping a delicately balanced glass off a table.  Cats are - and I say this with nothing

Film of the Week: ‘Weapons’ – Why did 17 children vanish at 2:17am?

ADVERTISEMENT From the get-go, writer-director Zach Cregger aims to get under your skin. A child narrator sets up the “true story,” in which “a lot of people die in a lot of really weird ways.” The unseen youth is not wrong. Before we get to those deaths, we’re presented with Weapon’s central mystery through enduring imagery:

Must read

Life-sized animal puppets complete 20,000km climate crisis journey

ADVERTISEMENT Back in April, a herd of towering, life-sized animal puppets - from elephants, giraffes, to antelopes and lions - set out from Kinshasa, in the Congo rainforest, on a hugely ambitious journey that would take them across two continents and 20,000km. Their migration - fictional but steeped in reality - was designed to mirror

Fire in the Mosque of Cordoba extinguished

ADVERTISEMENT A fire, reported shortly after 9 pm on Friday, affected the Mosque-Cathedral of Córdoba. The blaze began in the Patio de los Naranjos, near the Puerta de San José, prompting the evacuation of the area around Magistral González Francés Street to allow fire crews to carry out their work. According to the town's mayor
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you