Lethbridge Herald

Wide Skies Festival returning with rooftop event

- Al Beeber abeeber@lethbridge­herald.com Follow @albeebHera­ld on Twitter

The Wide Skies festival is back! The downtown event staged by Mike Spencer of the Geomatic Attic will return in a modified form July 28.

The festival will be staged this year on the roof of the downtown Park ’N Ride building at 705 5 Avenue South with doors opening at 7:30 and music starting at 8:15 p.m.

Entertainm­ent will be provided by Monkeyjunk and Leeroy Stagger & The Rebeltone Sound.

While admission is free, patrons must register online at geomattica­ttic.ca due to limited capacity. Organizers are also accepting donations with a suggested $20 per ticket.

All guests are also being urged to have at least one COVID-19 vaccinatio­n before attending. Attendees will be spaced out to avoid close contact as much as possible. Organizers are also urging music fans to be environmen­tally friendly and find alternativ­e ways of attending the festival rather than by driving, such as using a bus, bicycling or walking.

No liquor sales will be available onsite but New West Theatre will be operating a beer garden starting at 6 p.m. in the west parking lot of the Bowman Arts Centre across the street.

“We did Wide Skies for three years and it was very successful,” said Spencer last week.

“We will plan to do it again in the future kind of in the same format with the street closure on 11 Street beside Southminst­er United Church but we didn’t feel comfortabl­e doing that this year,” said Spencer.

“So we came up with kind of a hybrid version of it called Wide Skies Reimagined.”

Fans will go to the top floor of the facility, said Spencer. “It’s a parking lot and the draw is you’ve got these views of downtown Lethbridge and surroundin­g area. Some of it will kind of be at the dusk period and some will be at night and will create quite an ambience, I think,” he added.

“The two bands we have are pretty high calibre and they’re drawing a lot of attention. We have to limit the amount of people that can be up there just because it’s a large space but we still are respecting a lot of the COVID practices and we also have fire regulation­s, et cetera, and emergency health regulation­s to abide by. So the capacity is 400 people.”

The festival concept, he suggested, came about fairly recently.

“You always like to have more time but the province only opened up things July 1 and even then, it was only contingent on vaccinatio­n numbers and COVID numbers dropping. So basically, we started discussion­s with the City in kind of early June and they were really encouragin­g us to do something because I think they see it as a space unused. . . I think really what they are looking for is to encourage events happening in the downtown area and bring people into the downtown,” Spencer added.

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 ?? HERALD FILE PHOTO ?? Audience members applaud a performanc­e by Shakura S’Aida at the 2018 Wide Skies Festival.
HERALD FILE PHOTO Audience members applaud a performanc­e by Shakura S’Aida at the 2018 Wide Skies Festival.

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