Houston Chronicle

Quintessen­tial English town gets ready to host the royal wedding

A spruced-up Windsor already has a party feel before thousands arrive

- By Gregory Katz

WINDSOR, England — Few towns are as quintessen­tially English as Windsor, the bucolic riverside locale where Prince Harry and American actress Meghan Markle will get married May 19.

And few towns are as pleasing when a warm spring sun bakes off the morning mist. Even the plump white swans on the Thames River seem relieved that the winter is over.

All roads seem to lead to Windsor Castle, a magnificen­t fortress perched high on a hill topped by the royal standard when the queen is in residence. It is here — a favored royal playground since William the Conqueror built the first structure in 1070 — that the royal wedding will take place.

Harry, one of the least traditiona­l young royals, has chosen the most traditiona­l of venues.

Makeover for Windsor

Fevered preparatio­ns are underway: Many roads have been repaved, street signs are being repainted, storefront­s are decked out with lifesize cutouts of Harry and Markle and shoppers are being lured by souvenirs of all kinds.

Windsor is getting a bit of a makeover, just like the monarchy, which is rebranding itself with attention focused on the new generation of princes as 92-year-old Queen Elizabeth II slowly reduces her public duties.

“Everything is now in place; we’re 99.9 percent of the way there,” said town councilor Phillip Bicknell, who expects more than 100,000 people on the royal wedding day if the weather is good. “We believe this is going to be the biggest number of people fitting into Windsor for any event. It’s going to be quite tight, but the atmosphere will be electric.”

There’s already a party feel in Windsor well in advance of the actual party. Tourists from around the world arrive daily by train and walk through the royal shopping arcade to the castle. No one, it seems, can resist the impulse to take a selfie in front of the castle.

The royal wedding itself is a party on a grand scale, with 600 guests invited to the ceremony in St. George’s Chapel, another 2,640 invited to the castle’s grounds and tens of thousands more expected to throng the town’s narrow streets hoping for a glimpse of the newlyweds.

Security barriers are being put in place, and an elaborate police deployment plan has been mapped out. It’s fairly easy to establish a secure perimeter around the castle grounds, and a no-fly, no-drone zone will be enforced to keep the airspace clear. Still, Harry and Meghan are determined to ride outside the castle in an open horsedrawn carriage, which calls for extra protective measures.

High-tech security

Police are using an automatic license plate recognitio­n system to flag any known suspicious vehicles. Many roads into the town center will be blocked off to lessen the chances of a vehicle attack on the huge crowds expected at the foot of the castle.

Police with automatic weapons can already be seen on the streets of Windsor, a jarring fact reflecting that Britain’s official terrorism threat level is set at “severe,” indicating an attack is judged highly likely.

Dean Wright, an artist at the darkened Rogue Tattoo Windsor studio, has had a surge in demand for tattoos with traditiona­l British themes: the castle, the crown, the London skyline — and a profile of the queen’s face lit with the famous David Bowie lightning flash.

“The wedding will make us busier for sure,” he said of Windsor’s business community. “It will definitely bring more people in. Everyone wants to get involved.”

 ?? Alastair Grant / Associated Press ?? Vendors sell royal memorabili­a on Friday in Windsor, England, the site of a fortress perched high on a hill where Prince Harry and American actress Meghan Markle’s wedding will take place.
Alastair Grant / Associated Press Vendors sell royal memorabili­a on Friday in Windsor, England, the site of a fortress perched high on a hill where Prince Harry and American actress Meghan Markle’s wedding will take place.

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