Harbour festival draws huge crowds to city centre

- Published
Hundreds of thousands of people descended on Bristol's waterfront over the weekend for the city's biggest free festival.
Organisers of this year's Bristol Harbour Festival described the event, held from 18 to 20 July, as a "resounding success".
Hundreds of performers - 80% of whom are based in the city - took to the stage across the weekend, including headline act The Longest Johns.
"The Harbour Festival 2025 was a bold, diverse and joyful celebration of everything that makes Bristol brilliant," said the organisers in a statement on Monday.

As well as a huge range of music acts, live talks and other creative performances, visitors were also treated to views of Tall Ship Galeón Andalucía, which was docked in the harbour all weekend.

Musical acts performed late into the evening against the iconic backdrop of Bristol's waterfront.

The festival has a long history in Bristol, with the very first event held in 1971 as part of a fight by local campaigning groups to save the docks.

In 1996 the harbour became the site of the first International Festival of the Sea, drawing in tall ships from international waters - a tradition that has continued for nearly 30 years.

The team behind the festival said the event "transformed the harbourside into a mile-long cultural playground, featuring six unique zones bursting with live music, dance, circus and on-the-water spectacles".

While much of the activity during the festival is now firmly based on dry land, elements such as the raft race have remained popular.

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