Mayor Perry challenged over broken promises in Wandle Park

Locals in Waddon and Broad Green are challenging the Croydon Mayor to keep his promise to re-open the café in Wandle Park.

A river runs through it: Wandle Park has been neglected for the last five years, its café remaining closed

Wandle Park, wedged in alongside railway and tram tracks, on the western edge of the borough close to the Purley Way, is among the oldest public open spaces in Croydon.

Civic-minded Victorians laid out the public park on the site of Stubbs Mead and Frogs Mead, low-lying land through which ran the River Wandle. With the creation of a boating lake, Wandle Park was officially opened in 1890, on a day when 30,000 people turned out for the occasion. There probably wasn’t much on the telly.

There was a bandstand, a bowling green with pavilion and tennis courts. According to an official history of the park, by the 1930s Wandle Park had become “the venue for the borough’s Summer Show, there were pony rides, hoop-la, boat-swings and roundabouts”. Sounds like a scene from Half A Sixpence…

“In the summer children fished in the Wandle or paddled through the culvert downstream of the park to arrive at Waddon Ponds. Rowing boats could be hired on the lake for 6d per hour [that’s 2½p in today’s coinage] or a boatman would take 30 children at a time for a punt around the lake, in a boat covered with an awning, at one penny per head.

“In the winter the lake froze over and was used for ice-skating. Traders sold roast chestnuts and baked potatoes on the island in the middle of the lake.”

In the winter of 2025, there’s nowhere for anyone to sell as much as a cup of hot tea…

Bleak house: Wandle Park’s café has been shuttered for almost five years. And so has the park’s toilets

The park’s café was built in 2013 and opened a year later, as part of a multi-million-pound restoration of Wandle Park which also saw the culverted river brought back to the surface, the bandstand restored, and instead of the Victorian ornamental lake, a wildlife pond was dug out and more modern amusements, a basketball court and skate park, created.

The park was formally declared re-open in July 2013, and the café opened a year later.

The optimism and hopes of a decade ago around this revived community facility have slowly, quietly, been eroded. Lockdown saw the café closed up and it has not re-opened since.

Unwittingly, the council’s website highlights the fundamental problem they have created: “Café  – Currently closed,” it reads. “Toilets in café.” Oh.

The shuttered front of the café is “bleak,” Rowenna Davis, one of the local councillors, says in a letter to Mayor Jason Perry.

“There is nowhere to rest, change a baby, go to the bathroom or buy a hot drink in the winter.”

The council has run two rounds of bidding for people to take on the park café’s franchise – the thriving and bustling café in Lloyd Park demonstrates the potential for hard-working, enterprising businesses.

Park life: Labour councillor Rowenna Davis wants action from the Mayor

But under the terms of the lease offered by Perry’s council, the café tenants also have to undertake maintenance and cleaning of the public toilets, which comes with other issues in a town centre park with a recent reputation as a venue for drug dealing and some anti-social behaviour.

Local residents and members of the Friends of Wandle Park maintain that having a functioning café open throughout the week will help draw more families to the park and also help deter some of the less welcome visitors. It is a view supported by the Metropolitan Police.

Inside Croydon understands that one successful bidder for the café licence pulled out at a late stage.

Another round of bidding was conducted that restricted offers to traders based in Croydon, a short-sighted imposition which immediately ruled out dozens of potential bidders from nearby in south London.

Mayor Perry had first said that the Wandle Park café would be re-opened in March 2023 – almost two years ago. Yet despite all of Mayor Perry’s bluster, the café remains closed.

“If he’s incapable of getting the Wandle Park café re-opened, how are we meant to believe he’s capable of ‘fixing the finances’, like he promised?” said one resident, their patience with the under-delivering Mayor having worn thin.

Labour councillor Davis’s latest letter to the Mayor was sent yesterday, accompanied by a petition with more than 100 signatures demanding the re-opening of the Wandle Park café.

There in black and white: from the council’s own website. The park’s toilets remain closed as long as the café remains closed

They “desperately” want to see the café reopened, Davis said.

“At the end of December, residents gathered to turn this round. They ran their own ‘Pop Up’ café in the park, decorating stalls with fairy lights and offering hot drinks and home-baked muffins to passers-by.

“In just two hours, we managed to collect almost 100 signatures from people calling to have the café reopened, proving that there is wonderful demand for a local business there.

“A café would provide sustenance and community to local people, particularly during our fantastic festivals in the summer, as well as a source of employment and business rates. Local police have also said they believe reopening the café would deter the anti-social behaviour that has been growing in the park.

“We know you have committed to the café reopening this spring. But please understand this is hard to trust after years of being let down. We were originally told that the café would reopen – at the latest – in spring 2023. Delays, failed bids and poor communication have been our experience here.

“Residents were also disappointed to hear that, in the last bidding round you set up, only established café providers in the borough were allowed to bid to run the café. This has let down local people, many of whom had ideas for regenerating the café themselves.

“It may be that experienced providers could win the contract, but not even giving local people the chance to have their bids considered and compared seems oddly unjust.”

Formally presenting the petition, Davis concluded her letter to Mayor Perry with two requests: for the Mayor to keep his promise to open Wandle Park café this spring, and to allow individuals and community groups to bid for contracts like these.

Read more: ‘Mayor and CEO are respected and provide strong leadership’
Read more: Perry’s Purley ‘milestone’ could become millstone for Mayor
Read more: IT’S OFFICIAL: Croydon still among country’s worst councils
Read more: Fresh shame for council in 4 ‘severe maladministration’ cases



PAID ADS: To advertise your services or products to our 10,000 weekday visitors to the site, as featured on Google News Showcase, email us inside.croydon@btinternet.com for our unbeatable ad rates


Inside Croydon – If you want real journalism, delivering real news, from a publication that is actually based in the borough, please consider paying for it. Sign up today: click here for more details


  • If you have a news story about life in or around Croydon, or want to publicise your residents’ association or business, or if you have a local event to promote, please email us with full details at inside.croydon@btinternet.com
  • As featured on Google News Showcase

About insidecroydon

News, views and analysis about the people of Croydon, their lives and political times in the diverse and most-populated borough in London. Based in Croydon and edited by Steven Downes. To contact us, please email inside.croydon@btinternet.com
This entry was posted in Broad Green, Business, Croydon Council, Croydon parks, Friends of Wandle Park, Mayor Jason Perry, Rowenna Davis, Waddon, Wandle Park and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

14 Responses to Mayor Perry challenged over broken promises in Wandle Park

  1. Stephen Tyler says:

    What a surprise.

    Just like the repair to the grandstand at Croydon Arena. Fine words butter no parsnips. And other alcohol fuelled promises in 2000 by the then Council Leader who on departing the clubhouse, crossed the River Lethe and did nothing.

  2. Carl Lucas says:

    I have a friend that lives near there that runs a café in a park in another area of London they’ve turned it into a real hub of that community. I told them about this and they said it’s pretty rough around Wandle Park plus at their café the council has park keepers that keep the park in great condition and look after things such as toilets. On top of that the council covers their energy bills. Croydon will be doing none of that, so all in all this café opportunity isn’t a great one. Plus what an ugly building, I’m not surprised they’ve found it difficult to find anyone to run the place.

  3. Councillor Simon Fox, Waddon’s only Conservative councillor, has just posted a “Waddon News” leaflet through local residents’ doors proclaiming his support for and from Mayor Perry, and that together they are “delivering for Waddon” (but it doesn’t say what).

    The leaflet also says “the Wandle Park Café is on the rental market” and that “both Jason Perry and I are here to help you”.

    You can help by getting that café open, Simon. Should be a doddle with the Mayor behind you

    • I see that sly Fox has been busy having his photo taken today alongside piss-poor Perry because, in another Croydon park, Waddon Ponds, the council has done what it is supposed to do, and rebuilt the viewing platform.

      Let’s hope someone deals with the vermin problem at the Ponds, too…

  4. Haydn White says:

    If IC and the readership would forgive me but everytime I look at IC there seems to be the regular broadside regarding piss poor and or his minions and I thought this cant be right, nobody and no administration can be that bad, So in the interests of balanced journalism, is there a list of promises not broken, decisions not tainted with a whiff of corruption, or a general well done. I guess IC and the readership may have to think long and hard about this but as I said nobody can be that bad , can they?

    • No such list exists. Which is why Perry (and Katherine Kerswell) got their mates in to do a Peer Review whitewash, and probably why Perry seems to be in denial about this year’s £20million-plus budget overspend and the feared £83million overspend next year.

      He has failed by every measure that he set himself in his 2021 manifesto.

    • Ian Kierans says:

      A simple fact is that there are too many things wrong and getting worse.
      Another fact is that he is an Executive Mayor so the buck stops with him.

      But who in the borough challanged them? How many of us attended residents meetings or Council meetings?
      If they operate without us taking any notice or interest why are we surprised at the outcome?

      The only thing required for an elected officer and its administration to operate so badly and wrongly is for those that elect, to say nothing, see nothing, hear nothing and do nothing.

      So in that envionment why are we surpised that we receive – well nothing much, but more debt, more tax, and less services and maintenance!

      What the Borough needs is to move on from the disasterous debacles and shambles. it needs to do this quickly. It needs to bring the Community together and have them working with the Council, not flinging brickbats well deserved or not.

      The Community needs an honest and open administration it can believe in and work with. It needs those placed in positions at the Council to deliver and be honest, even about what it cannot do or information they cannot release.

      Is it not time everyone worked together with one objective – to make Croydon a safe and healthy place to live for everyone?

      That is Mr Perry’s and Ms Kerswells role – they are there to lead – not just to manage decline, deprivation, and entrench despair. Actually Lead.

      So is it not time those at the Council and Elected officers got over the self interests and politic’s, stepped up to the mark and began working together to have a real recovery.
      I have though about it for quite a long time – a few decades to be precise, and I attended and challanged in person and in writing along with research and was and still am open to opposite points of view and new facts and data

      But hey – What do you think Haydn do you agree or not?

    • Nick Goy says:

      Croydon Trading Standards Dept won an award, last month, I heard exceptionally and pleasingly.

      This was covered in… Inside Croydon…

      https://insidecroydon.com/2024/12/17/councils-trading-standards-team-wins-london-wide-award/

  5. George Wright says:

    Many Council staff are committed to public service and continue to do their utmost to provide for the community, in spite of underfunding and appalling political and frequently poor executive leadership.

    • I’m sure ‘many Council staff are committed to public service’ but I’m equally sure that all the responsibility for Croydon’s woeful performance cannot be laid at the door of the senior ‘officers’ or politicians. They always get the blame in the pages of IC, but common sense tells me that there must be failures from top to bottom.

  6. yusufaosman says:

    When I lived in Waddon I used to regularly walk in Wandle Park. I found it a lovely place to walk with a great path that circumnavigated the space, very useful if you are blind and the people I sometimes literally bumped into were extremely friendly. Oh I should apply the same word to the dogs I regularly met.
    Its just a shame that there was no cafe, no toilets and no one regularly patrolling the park to ensure it remained tidy and safe for all.

Leave a Reply to Christopher MyersCancel reply