All Eyes on the Town Hall Giant illuminated eyes on the Birmingham Town Hall columns in Victoria Square.

Birmingham Light Festival is back for its second year, brightening up Valentine’s weekend. The nights are still dark; the weather has been wet for so long that a burst of colour and light is exactly what is required to lift the mood before spring finally arrives.

I signed up for a photo walk organised by IgersbirminghamUK as part of the Birmingham Light festival. Our mission was to cover as many installations as possible on foot. Birmingham is a big city, but the artworks are placed at key spots, each linked by a brisk 5 to 10 minute walk.

Firefly Field
We met at St Paul’s Church, where the lawn shimmered with tiny moving lights. Up close, they revealed themselves as hundreds of glowing points gently “dancing” in the dark. This ‘Firefly Field’ looked magical to the eye, but photographing the movement was a challenge. A tripod and long exposure did the trick, turning the flickers into sweeping trails of light.

Birmingham Light Festival
Firefly Field Long Exposure – Long-exposure light trails showing the movement of firefly-style lights at Birmingham Light Festival.

Ideas Happen Here
Our next stop was Newhall Square hear to the canal. Here, a giant glowing lightbulb sat beside a reflection pool. The artwork was bold, playful, and perfect for photography. The reflections doubled the impact, offering endless composition options. I had seen this at last year’s Birmingham Light Festival, but it still felt fresh when viewed for a second time.

Birmingham Light Festival
Ideas Happen Here – Large illuminated lightbulb sculpture at Newhall Square during Birmingham Light Festival.

Victoria Square
Victoria Square was packed with activity. In nearby Chamberlain Square, a giant Valentine’s heart glowed for the selfie crowd. Meanwhile, Birmingham Town Hall was watched over by huge, illuminated eyes.  These were quirky and slightly surreal surrounded by the columns which were lit in shifting colours.

Birmingham Light Festival
All Eyes on the Town Hall – Giant illuminated eyes on the Birmingham Town Hall look down on Iron:Man.

In the square, a silly statues x silent disco was in full swing. Dozens of people danced freely in total silence, headphones glowing. Light projections covered the Council House, inflatable figures waved overhead, and the whole scene felt wonderfully absurd. Even the Floozie in the Jacuzzi looked extra glamorous for the Birmingham Light Festival.

Birmingham Light Festival
Silent Disco Crowd – People dancing with glowing headphones during a silent disco in Victoria Square at night.
Birmingham Light Festival
Birmingham Light Festival with a balloon man dancing in front of the Council House.
Birmingham Light Festival
Birmingham Light Festival – the Floozie in the Jacuzzi.

The Heartbeat of Brindleyplace
After more walking, we reached Oozells Square, where glowing green boxes pulsed gently with real human heartbeats from across the city. Each box represented a person going about their day creating a strangely intimate and surprisingly moving concept. Capturing their reflections in nearby restaurant windows added another layer of storytelling.

Birmingham Light Festival
Heartbeat of Brindleyplace – Green glowing boxes pulsing with light in Oozells Square pulsing in time with real human heartbeats.
Birmingham Light Festival
Birmingham Light Festival – beating hearts reflected in a restaurant window.
My Beating Heart

Our Beating Heart
The walk between the artworks became part of the experience as we headed off towards the Mailbox.  There were canal reflections, glowing restaurant lights, and even a rogue flamingo hat floating in the water. At the Mailbox, we found a giant illuminated heart installation. I preferred the Heart’s past location at Snow Hill where there is more space, but it still made an eye-catching stop for photography.

Birmingham Light Festival
Brightly lit restaurants along the canal water near the Mailbox in Birmingham.
Birmingham Light Festival
Birmingham Light Festival – whose flamingo hat is this?
Birmingham Light Festival
Our Beating Heart Installation – Large illuminated heart sculpture displayed on the steps at the Mailbox.

Roof of Stars
On Thorp Street outside Birmingham Hippodrome’s stage door, strings of star-like lights stretched overhead They are beautiful to see, but tricky to photograph. Thankfully, some shiny parked cars nearby provided perfect reflective surfaces.

Birmingham Light Festival
Roof of Stars – Overhead canopy of star-like lights suspended across Thorp Street.

Reunion
Back to our walk and the 1,000 trades square had arches of light symbolising connection between people.   The colourful arches outside New Street station symbolised reunions and framed the streams of passing travellers. This was a dream place for street photography with light, movement, and real human moments all in one place.

Birmingham Light Festival jpg
Reunion Light Arches – Glowing archway installation near Birmingham New Street Station with people walking underneath.

My Heart Belongs in Birmingham
By now, my legs were protesting, but there was time for one final stop. Tucked into a tree near the Shakespeare pub were glowing hearts withthe “Instagram-ready” slogan, “My heart belongs in Birmingham.  We joined the long line of photographers capturing the same shot but it was worth it.

Birmingham Light Festival
My Heart Belongs in Birmingham – Illuminated heart shapes hanging in a tree on Lower Temple Street.

Huge thanks to Nadia, Kasim, and Jack from IgersbirminghamUK for leading such an energetic tour of the Birmingham Light Festival. Covering that much ground and that many installations in one evening was seriously impressive.

FORGED
I returned the following night to catch a fiery animatronic installation featuring pounding industrial music (Insurgent), flame effects, and dramatic mechanical movement. It perfectly captured Birmingham’s industrial heritage brash and noisy, it was spectacular and impossible to ignore.This year’s festival clearly built on the success of the first. If this is the direction that the Birmingham Light Festival is heading, then it will be a highlight of Birmingham’s winter calendar for years to come.

Birmingham Light Festival
FORGED – Fiery animatronic installation with flames and industrial lighting effects at Birmingham Light Festival.
The fire breathing bat at FORGED
Birmingham Light Festival
Insurgent playing at the FORGED art installation. I would love to hear them again.
Insurgent at FORGED

You may wish to compare this year’s description of the Birmingham Light Festival with the one that took place in 2025 and here is my blog of the event.

Birmingham Light Festival - Frefly Bokeh
Firefly Bokeh
Stratford canal from the Drawbridge to the High Street, November, 2024

Discovering new places for a photography story requires good research. Many times, I have heard other photographers say they’ve exhausted their immediate area for pictures. I would reply that I have barely scratched the surface. So, as I was looking around on Google Maps, Majors Green Aqueduct caught my interest. I had two hours free while Monty, our dog, was being groomed. Yes, our dog is well looked after. I planned to park on Aqueduct Road and explore the structure before walking up to the Drawbridge Inn. Doubling back along the canal would allow me to take pictures of the aqueduct from above. Google Maps tags other people’s pictures to points of interest, so you can check the favoured points of view.

Stratford canal from the Drawbridge to the High Street, November, 2024
The Majors Green viaduct.

Parking my car near the aqueduct, I quickly gained an appreciation for the scale of the engineering that went into its construction. Many bricks had been used to allow the canal to cross over both the road and the River Cole. The River Cole passes through Birmingham and Coleshill before joining the River Blythe. At the bridge, the river passes underneath, and there are remnants of a walkway. I quickly discovered that the traffic around here moves quickly, and there are no pavements for pedestrians. You cannot access the canal from the bridge, so I carefully took pictures and then set off for the Drawbridge over the canal.

Stratford canal from the Drawbridge to the High Street, November, 2024
Red car over the Drawbridge
Stratford canal from the Drawbridge to the High Street, November, 2024
Can you read the noticeboard?

The Shirley Drawbridge sits over the northern section of the Stratford Canal. The bridge is always down to let cars pass over, and it will only open with a waterways key. There is a famous public house, the Drawbridge Inn, next to the canal, and the road is a bottleneck for cars as it is a popular shortcut through Majors Green to Shirley. Upon reaching the canal, I turned north and very soon encountered a heron fishing for its dinner. The heron was on the opposite bank, but fortunately, I had my 100-400mm lens with me, and I was able to get some great close-up pictures.

Stratford canal from the Drawbridge to the High Street, November, 2024
It is rude to stare.
Stratford canal from the Drawbridge to the High Street, November, 2024
Can’t you see I am fishing.
Stratford canal from the Drawbridge to the High Street, November, 2024
Yes I am!

The aqueduct at canal level is covered with colourful graffiti, and there is a steep drop over the bridge. I’ve taken a documentary course, the Stirchley Observation Project, which has tuned me into alternative approaches to photography. I see interesting pictures that others may miss. As you’ll see, there are flamingo statues, abandoned chairs, and remnants of some form of canal gateway. I now appreciate the small things in everyday life, which often have a story attached to them. My time to turn back was approaching, but not before I discovered an abandoned canal boat and a Woodland Trust area.

Stratford canal from the Drawbridge to the High Street, November, 2024
Looking over the aqueduct.
Stratford canal from the Drawbridge to the High Street, November, 2024
Is that a heron or a flamingo?
Stratford canal from the Drawbridge to the High Street, November, 2024
Slow down, take a seat and watch the world go round.
Stratford canal from the Drawbridge to the High Street, November, 2024
A bus passing along the High Street over the canal.
Stratford canal from the Drawbridge to the High Street, November, 2024
Under the bridge.

I returned the way I had come, and again there were new views to be photographed. The canals are always full of surprises, with wildlife and historical artefacts thrown into the mix. Both dereliction and new projects go hand in hand. All this adds up to a photographic adventure for the camera enthusiast.

Stratford canal from the Drawbridge to the High Street, November, 2024
Stop

I have several posts on the Stratford-upon-Avon canal and I have included a link to the Kingswood junction which is further south.

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