security
     
Nov 09   AP Q’S UP AT THE FORUM

The annual Q Awards is one of the music industry’s most infamous events, renown for its celebrity shenanigans. This year it was held on 26th October at the Grosvenor House in Park Lane with Q Awards – The Gigs, this year held at north London venue the HMV Forum, providing a six-day run up of top band performances including Kasabian, Biffy Clyro and Lostprophets. With a stellar line up and attendance by a host of famous faces, The Forum needed to know that crowd management would not be an issue. It put full trust in resident crowd safety company, A.P. Security and wasn’t disappointed. READ MORE>
     

Oct 09

 

FROM ROCK 'n' ROLL TO CULTURE 'n' CUISINE - AP Security shines (again) in Leeds and London

The most obvious proof of doing a job well is being asked back to do it again. And it’s a sign of AP Security’s peerless professionalism that the safety and crowd management company is a ‘regular’ at so many high profile events throughout the UK. Two (of many) examples in 2009 were the Leeds Festival and London Mela.
This year saw AP make it 11 in a row at the Leeds festival, the event which saw the company awarded the first ever Safeconcerts Award for Excellence last year.
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Sep 09

 

A.P. SECURITY EXHIBITS AT SHOWMAN'S SHOW

This year’s Showman’s Show will see A.P. Security making a welcome return to the Newbury Showground to remind the industry just what one of the safest names in crowd management can provide for it. READ MORE>

     
Sep 09   MADNESS AND LOVE IN EAST LONDON. AP SECURITY GETS THAT FESTIVAL FEELING AGAIN

Having enjoyed sold-out events for four years running in London’s Finsbury Park, Madstock - the festival featuring self-styled ‘nutty boys’ Madness - disappeared for over a decade. But in July 2009 it enjoyed a triumphant return at a new venue, Victoria Park. And with AP Security in charge of crowd management and stewarding at it and the ensuing Lovebox weekend, both were an unqualified success. READ MORE>
     

Aug 09
 

AP SECURITY SAYS HOORAY FOR HENLEY

The Henley Festival is one of Britain’s more quirky summer events, with an eclectic musical programme ranging from jazz to classical and world music to pop – this year featured Katherine Jenkins, Fascinating Aida, Australian collective Kamerunga, impressionist Jan Ravens, comedian Arthur Smith, John Barrowman and, vocal quartet Cantabile amongst others - as well as art exhibitions, fine dining, spectacular fireworks and a variety of weird and wacky performers providing added entertainment throughout each evening.
READ MORE>

     
July 09   AP SECURITY’S PLANNING PAYS OFF AT GLASTONBURY 2009
Put nearly 140,000 people and hundreds of attractions - from the mainstream to the truly surreal - into several thousand acres of prime English farmland for a weekend and, without very carefully managed safety and stewarding, there is the potential for many problems. But with the long-term planning and careful site management of companies like AP Security, this year’s Glastonbury Festival passed off very smoothly indeed..
READ MORE>
     
June 09   UNIVERSAL PRAISE FOR AP SECURITY’S BAISHAKHI MELA DEBUT
The Baishakhi (or Banglatown) Mela is Europe’s largest open air Asian festival, with up to 100,000 people descending on the area surrounding London’s Brick Lane to celebrate the Bengali New Year. Now in its 18th year, the mix of parades, stalls, funfairs and two live music festival sites is a highly complex event to steward, so for 2009 the organisers brought in the unrivalled expertise and experience of AP Security to help ensure that everything ran smoothly.READ MORE>
     
May 09   BREAKIN' CONVENTION, BUT NOT BREAKIN’ THE RULES
London’s Sadler’s Wells is regarded as the home for dance in the UK, be it contemporary, tap or tango, so it is the ideal location for staging the annual Breakin’ Convention Festival of Hip Hop Dance Theatre. READ MORE>
     
    AP SECURITY IS THE FRIENDLY FACE OF HULL KR
Currently sitting second in the engage Super League competition, Hull KR regularly accommodates thousands of spectators at New Craven Park ground for the team’s home fixtures. Rugby crowds have a reputation for being boisterous but good-natured, and it is the latter quality which is to the fore in AP’s crowd management style. READ MORE>

 

 
feature story
 

AP Security is in the saddle at the Tour of Britain


Originally dating back to 1945, when a Brighton to Glasgow ‘Victory Cycling Marathon’ was the first staged cycle race in UK history, the event that has ultimately become the Tour of Britain is one of the highlights in the British cycling calendar. This year’s race finished in London and took in some of the city’s busiest areas, meaning road closures and stewarding had to be very carefully managed. Just the kind of ultra high responsibility job that AP Security is used to.

Madstock Festival security


This year’s Tour of Britain covered 746 miles (1200km) over eight days in September and featured eight stages, covering parts of Scotland, northern England, the south west and finally London, where ten circuits of a 5.7 mile (9.25km) circuit brought the event to an exciting climax along Victoria Embankment, Westminster Bridge, Whitehall, Parliament Square, Minories and Thames Street.

This required closing roads on a busy Saturday afternoon, managing the thousands of people who turned up to watch and keeping an eye on multiple places where people could cross the course. Although it was the first time that AP had worked on the Tour of Britain, the company’s usual meticulous planning ensured that it went extremely smoothly.

The first meeting with the organisers was held six weeks prior to the day, where a steep learning curve was cheerfully embraced by AP’s head of security for the event, Adam Scott, and his team.

Extensive liaison followed with Westminster Council, Transport For London and an independent traffic consultant, all of whom were impressed by AP’s experience, professionalism and attention to detail. Because AP’s staff were covering such a large area, maps of the site, working out how to ferry staff to the different areas and supervisor briefings all had to be done well in advance.

Once everything was in place, Adam’s day started at 11pm the evening before the event, deploying staff for the first road closures, to clear the way for the event’s infrastructure to go in at around 1am.

In all, AP supplied around 200 staff, who were deployed throughout the night with bulk coming in for a 6am start on the Saturday. The route was divided up into six sectors, each having a sector supervisor. Beneath the supervisor, staff were deployed on road closures, as route marshals and at crossing points. AP staff also manned the event control hub, where all the stewarding, road closures and traffic decisions were fed back to. Adam spent much of his time there, as well as walking the route to check that everything was running smoothly.

“It was a complicated event and, being the first time we’d been contracted to do it, we had a certain amount of learning to do regarding the precise locations, type of crowds and so on,” says Adam. “However, our regular work in stewarding, crowd management and managing road closures at events elsewhere in London meant that we could apply our many years of experience to ensure that the organisers, police and local authority all had complete confidence in us delivering an event which was safe, but with no lack of excitement and interest.

“Everyone was happy with our performance, the event went really well and we very much hope we’ll be back next year!“

 

 

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