A hand-drawn map of Greenwich Peninsula showing the River Thames winding past the O2, the cable car, the university, Central Park, the Design District and homes, with a red question mark marking the riverside site this page is about.

What could this be?

A whole riverside site, free for years. And nobody asked us what it could be. So we filled it in ourselves, before it's decided for us.

Six daydreams (and a blank one)

Imagined use · sport & play
01

London Sands

Weatherproof sand courts under cover: beach volleyball, beach tennis, footvolley. Drop-in family sessions, evening leagues, beginner classes, and a café. A bit of summer indoors while it buckets down outside.

🌞 daytime use👨‍👩‍👧 family-friendly🏠 local value
Imagined use · skating culture
02

The Roller Yard

The Peninsula already has roller skaters. They just don't have a roof. A smooth, weatherproof rink for skate culture: open sessions, lessons, roller discos, beginner mornings. Bring your own laces.

🌞 daytime use🌙 less late dispersal🏠 local value
Imagined use · movement & fitness
03

Peninsula Movement Hall

One big flexible hall for moving your body: bouldering walls, yoga and dance floors, table tennis, climbing-play for kids, fitness classes, quiet bookable hours for community groups. No chrome-and-mirrors gym vibes.

🌞 daytime use👨‍👩‍👧 family-friendly🏠 local value🚶 distributed footfall
Imagined use · market & makers
04

The Market

The Peninsula had a market in the square, then lost it. Bring it back: bread, veg, a proper grocer, makers, local art, coffee. Somewhere to do the Saturday shop, buy from people who live here, and bump into a neighbour. The parkrunners already finish on this stretch, the cable car could bring more across. No big build, a weekend in the yard does it.

🌞 daytime use👨‍👩‍👧 family-friendly🏠 local value🧱 temporary/removable
Imagined use · borrow, fix, reuse
05

The Useful Warehouse

Borrow the drill you'd use twice instead of buying it. A library of things, a repair shop for your zip, your bike, your kettle, a secondhand floor for furniture and outgrown kids' stuff, and the pack of screws nowhere else on the Peninsula sells. Classes to mend your own, a café in the middle, and a weekend reuse market worth crossing the river for. Everyday for us, a reason to visit for everyone else.

🧱 temporary/removable🌞 daytime use🏠 local value🚶 distributed footfall
Imagined use · books & culture
06

The Peninsula Library

A town this size, and not one library. So build a better one: new books, a secondhand shelf, local art where NOW Gallery used to be, kids' story time, talks and classes. Plus the proper breakfast the Peninsula somehow doesn't have, coffee all day, a glass of wine at night. A place to read, meet and hang out by the river, open to everyone, not just people with a ticket.

🌞 daytime use👨‍👩‍👧 family-friendly🏠 local value🚶 distributed footfall
Imagined use · ???
07

Your Idea Here

We filled six in an afternoon. There are thousands of us. What would you put on a free riverside site you got to keep for years? Don't overthink it. That was never the hard part. Being asked was.

A hand-drawn cross-section of the riverside: two ticketed venues and about 300 new homes beside a green strip, a narrow 1.5-metre footpath and a two-way cycle path packed with a crowd and a stuck cyclist, then the quiet Tide path with loungers and shade, and the River Thames. A hand-drawn cross-section of the riverside: two ticketed venues and about 300 new homes, a green strip, a narrow 1.5-metre footpath and a two-way cycle path packed with a crowd and a stuck cyclist, the quiet Tide path with loungers and shade, and the River Thames.

So what's actually planned?

Two ticketed, mass-entertainment venues, next to the riverside and 25 metres from homes.

Destination-level events, marketed nationally and internationally, with repeated shows, over eight times a week.

When a show ends, up to 2,250 people leave at once, onto the Thames Path. The footpath is about 1.5m in places, next to a two-way cycle lane. It's a riverside route, not a venue exit.

Even the applicants don't call it community use. Their own planning form says "not relevant."

Built for people with a ticket, not the people who live here.

None of our ideas is the answer. The difference is the point: a market or a court is something you'd use on a wet Tuesday. A ticketed show is a night out for visitors, then gone. And nobody asked us. The developer's consultation got 35 replies. We'd just like to be asked before it's locked in.

Why these, and not just anything?

This is a specific place: a narrow riverside path, homes right up against it, and a transport network already stretched thin. So there's a simple test for what belongs here. Does it give something to the people who live here, in the daytime, not just ticket-holders at night? Does it bring a steady trickle rather than a surge that floods the path and the tube? Does it wind down before midnight, not empty into quiet streets? Every idea on this board passes that test.

🌞 daytime use, alive in the day, not just at night
🏠 local value, built for people who live here, not just ticket-holders
🚶 distributed footfall, a steady trickle, not a surge-and-dump
🧱 temporary / removable, fits a "for now" site, packs away clean
👨‍👩‍👧 family-friendly, works for kids and grandparents too
🌙 less late dispersal, fewer midnight crowds into quiet streets

You can do a lot on a free riverside site next to homes. Just not everything.

Not a fantasy. In Peckham, a council car park earmarked for redevelopment became Peckham Levels: studios, a café, a gallery, workshops, a kids' play floor. It got so loved the council took it off the demolition list. Different site, same idea: a place waiting to be built on became something people actually wanted. Peckham Levels →

What would you put here?

A sentence is plenty. A scribble is plenty. The hard part was never the ideas. It was being asked.

Sketch your idea rough is good, that's the whole point
or just describe it
Pinned. Thanks, that took you less time than nobody asked us in years. 💛

We might show ideas on this page. We won't sell anything, spam you, or pretend your scribble is a planning application.

You don't have to draw to be in.

Five ways to push this along, from a ten-second tap to actually helping make one happen.

01 · ten seconds

React

Tap I'd use this on the ideas you'd actually show up for. No sign-up, no email.

↑ Back to the ideas
02 · two minutes

Add your own

Sketch it or just describe it. A scribble counts. Being asked was always the hard part.

↑ Add an idea
03 · one minute

Spread it

Send it to Design District, Ravensbourne, a club, a café, a class group chat.

↓ Grab the links
04 · offline

Take it further

Mention it to a local business, school, club or your councillor. Borrow any idea here. Posters and cards are yours to use.

No permission needed
05 · roll up sleeves

Help make one happen

Can you run sessions, design, organise, or offer a corner of a space? That's how daydreams get real.

✉ Get in touch

This only works if it travels. If you're at Design District, Ravensbourne, a local club, a café or a studio. This question is yours too. You lot imagine spaces for a living. Add an idea, then send it down the corridor. Takes two minutes, costs nothing, and proves the point: asking was always the easy part.

The council decides around 21 July (application 26/1247/F). Comments count most now, not the week of the vote. You don't need planning words: say you live nearby, what worries you, and that nobody asked the neighbourhood. Two minutes.

This isn't about being against events. It's that a riverside site is being handed to an outside operator for ticketed shows without the people who live around it ever being asked what else it could be. When a site sits free for years, shouldn't the neighbourhood get to imagine it too, before it's locked in? That's it. That's the whole thing. Everything here is an illustrative community idea, not a formal proposal, planning application, or objection, and not affiliated with any developer, operator, or event.