Five-year deal to keep Asylum steampunk festival in Lincoln

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Asylum steampunkImage source, Danny Lawson/PA Wire
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The Asylum festival - held annually in August - attracts up to 100,000 people each year

The future of a major steampunk festival has been secured after a deal to keep it in Lincoln for the next five years was agreed.

The Asylum festival - held annually in August - attracts up to 100,000 people each year and is believed to be worth about £2.5m to the local economy.

Plans had been drawn up to hold a smaller event in Newark this year due to Covid concerns, but were scrapped after the host venue closed.

The festival will now return in 2022.

Organiser John Naylor said: "Lincoln has provided a spectacular backdrop for the steampunk community's creativity since 2009 so we are delighted to be able to return.

"Covid looked like putting the kybosh on absolutely everything - so to be able to come out the other side, [and] with a plan to build and be more spectacular is just phenomenal," he said.

"What I'm really hoping for is Lincoln will end up with a festival as big and world-famous as the Edinburgh Fringe."

Image source, Lincolnshire County Council
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The festival - which started in 2009 - usually takes place in Lincoln's historic quarter

Image source, Christopher Furlong/Getty Images
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It is said to be worth more than £2.5m to the local economy

As part of next year's festival, Mr Naylor said they were looking to host a ball at the city's cathedral.

"As far as we know, nobody has ever filled a place like the medieval cathedral with 500 incredibly well-dressed steampunks.

"We want to bring total magic and splendour to Lincoln," he added.

Image source, Danny Lawson/PA Wire
Image caption,

Organisers said the event was about having fun and "looking splendid"

The agreement involved officials from both the county and city councils, along with Lincoln Business Improvement Group (BIG).

Sarah Loftus, chief executive of Lincoln BIG, said she was "over the moon".

"It's good for business, it's good for tourism and it's good for Lincoln," she said.

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