After last year's drone show disaster, is a scaled-back Vivid working?
While there are more individual light installations across the city than there were last year, there is no Royal Botanic Garden activation and no Wynyard Tunnel event.
Light displays now have free entry in 75 per cent of cases, but the light walk – which previously stretched from Circular Quay to Central – is split across smaller precincts around the city, including Martin Place and the Goods Line.
'When people think of Vivid, they think of the Opera House and the Harbour Bridge – when they get there, they aren't expecting most of the stuff to be somewhere else,' said John Gilly, who has covered the festival on his blog, Sydney Spectaculars, since 2014.
'The precincts have spread everything out … which is why people may think it's not as entertaining as in the past, but the main stuff is still there.'
This isn't the first time the festival has been split up. Over the years there have been activations in Kings Cross and Chatswood, as well as the Wild Nights display at Taronga Zoo.
While the strategy means visitors to Circular Quay are seeing fewer installations, many view this as the best way forward for Vivid.
'It's more spread out – and that's a good thing,' said Business Sydney's Paul Nicolau.
'We should be highlighting not just the harbour but all the other places, like Martin Place and the Goods Line. I think we should expand it, we should look out to other areas like Parramatta Road and Victoria Road.'
Getting tourists out to Sydney's decrepit arterial roads might be a stretch, but Parramatta Mayor Martin Zaiter is at a loss as to why Sydney's famous winter festival doesn't extend to its growing second CBD.
'Parramatta Square and our beautiful town hall, that's where old meets the new,' Zaiter said. 'Parramatta Park, Old Government House, definitely there are those options for Vivid to expand to.
'It's a no-brainer.'
While the light pillar of the festival may be missing a headline event this year, Tourism Minister Stephen Kamper said the food, including the fire kitchen at the Goods Line, has been a major motivator for visitors.
'Saturday night alone saw a record-breaking 51,169 diners at restaurants across the Vivid Sydney zones – the highest ever for a single night in the event's history,' he said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

The Age
5 days ago
- The Age
Major festival news for western Sydney – and that's just the start
NSW Labor has promised to redress a funding divide stretching between the harbour and the Blue Mountains that splits the city between the arts' haves and have-nots – spending $5 million to fund a new home-grown festival for western Sydney and other new projects. The government's three-year strategic plan for the region is to be announced at a gathering of the region's arts leaders at Blacktown Arts Centre on Tuesday. Front and centre of the new funding plans is development of a home-grown festival celebrating the region's diversity and creative spirit that could potentially rival Vivid, South by Southwest Sydney, or even the Sydney Festival. Campbelltown's Fisher's Ghost Festival and Parramatta Lanes are among the region's longest-running festivals, while Parramasala, celebrating south Asian arts, was cancelled in 2020 due to COVID and has yet to return. In opposition, Labor asserted Parramasala should be funded ahead of the Logies. 'In short, the vision is to create a thriving and inclusive creative ecosystem in western Sydney that celebrates its diverse communities, drives cultural innovation and delivers social and economic value for everyone,' Arts Minister John Graham will say. 'To get there the key priorities are unlocking investment, putting First Nations' culture at the centre, growing creative careers, strengthening creative ecosystems, better showcasing off western Sydney artists, and unlocking more cultural spaces.' This week's launch of the Western Sydney Plan for Arts, Culture and Creative Industries comes 25 years after former premier Bob Carr launched Labor's first western Sydney cultural strategy in 1999. The new $5 million funding commitment will be met entirely from cost savings made to Create NSW, the state's art agency, which is facing the loss of one-quarter of its workforce under a major restructure.

Sydney Morning Herald
5 days ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Major festival news for western Sydney – and that's just the start
NSW Labor has promised to redress a funding divide stretching between the harbour and the Blue Mountains that splits the city between the arts' haves and have-nots – spending $5 million to fund a new home-grown festival for western Sydney and other new projects. The government's three-year strategic plan for the region is to be announced at a gathering of the region's arts leaders at Blacktown Arts Centre on Tuesday. Front and centre of the new funding plans is development of a home-grown festival celebrating the region's diversity and creative spirit that could potentially rival Vivid, South by Southwest Sydney, or even the Sydney Festival. Campbelltown's Fisher's Ghost Festival and Parramatta Lanes are among the region's longest-running festivals, while Parramasala, celebrating south Asian arts, was cancelled in 2020 due to COVID and has yet to return. In opposition, Labor asserted Parramasala should be funded ahead of the Logies. 'In short, the vision is to create a thriving and inclusive creative ecosystem in western Sydney that celebrates its diverse communities, drives cultural innovation and delivers social and economic value for everyone,' Arts Minister John Graham will say. 'To get there the key priorities are unlocking investment, putting First Nations' culture at the centre, growing creative careers, strengthening creative ecosystems, better showcasing off western Sydney artists, and unlocking more cultural spaces.' This week's launch of the Western Sydney Plan for Arts, Culture and Creative Industries comes 25 years after former premier Bob Carr launched Labor's first western Sydney cultural strategy in 1999. The new $5 million funding commitment will be met entirely from cost savings made to Create NSW, the state's art agency, which is facing the loss of one-quarter of its workforce under a major restructure.

ABC News
14-07-2025
- ABC News
Sydney Symphony Orchestra: Christian Li performs Korngold
17-year-old Australian violin sensation Christian Li, teams up with charismatic Brazilian conductor Eduardo Strausser and the Sydney Symphony Orchestra for this exciting concert of American music. Christian Li was the youngest-ever winner of the Menuhin Competition and brings lyrical brilliance and cinematic flair to Korngold's Violin Concerto, which draws its themes from the composer's Hollywood film scores. The evening opens with the world premiere of Australian composer Bree van Reyk's Fanfare for Solidarity, a joyful tribute to the orchestra's stand for marriage equality. Recorded live in concert at Sydney Opera House Concert Hall on 28 June 2025. Producer André Shrimski. Engineers Jack Prest, Virginia Read and Andrew Edgson. Program Bree van Reyk: Fanfare for Solidarity Erich Wolfgang Korngold: Violin Concerto in D, Op.35 Jules Massenet: Thaïs - Méditation George Gershwin: Cuban Overture - Rhumba Leonard Bernstein: Symphonic Dances from West Side Story Artists Timothy Constable (tambourine) Rebecca Lagos (tambourine) Joshua Hill (tambourine) Christian Li (violin) Sydney Symphony Orchestra Eduardo Strausser (conductor) Find out more Read the concert program