project to address accessibility and safety issues
around bonfires. There is close liaison between Fire
Brigade, Police Service, City Council and the community
representatives responsible for individual bonfires.
The production of bonfires is evidence of extensive
‘grassroots’ self- organisation. The level of co-ordination
and co-operation required to accumulate, sort, and
transform the detritus of the modern city into the urban
spectacle that is the bonfires of ‘the Twelfth’ is a resource
unique to Belfast. Many of the bonfires demonstrate an
accumulated expertise both of the structural possibilities
of materials, and of the choreography of how they burn.
The skills, enthusiasm, and organisational capacity
required for bonfire construction are comparable to those
required for recycling in general. In recent years, Belfast
City Council has opened a number of public access
recycling centres. These typically comprise a robust surface with a large central sunken area to accommodate
large containers for the numerous waste categories, with
smaller depositing points located around the perimeter.
This surface, animated by people bringing, categorising,
and depositing their waste items, appears like a formalised
version of the activities at bonfire sites where materials
were carefully sorted into piles of varying constructional
and flammable qualities in the lead-up to bonfire night......Previous<<<