Greater Manchester has urged residents to prepare for a weekend of unprecedented disruption after civic leaders accidentally scheduled every concert, sporting event and human gathering in the North West for the same 48-hour period.
An estimated quarter of a million people will descend upon the city for Parklife, Take That, Lily Allen, the B-52s, international cricket, netball finals and what experts are calling “the largest coordinated assault on public transport since somebody invented rail replacement buses.”
Officials have advised residents to complete all essential journeys before Friday evening and then remain wherever they happen to be standing until sometime next week.
At Heaton Park, tens of thousands of Parklife attendees will gather to enjoy world-class music, warm weather and the traditional British festival experience of paying £8.50 for a can of warm liquid marketed as water.
Headliners include Calvin Harris, returning after 13 years away, presumably because he finally forgot how difficult it is to leave the site afterwards.
The festival coincides with Take That concerts at the Etihad, major sporting fixtures and arena shows, ensuring Manchester’s roads achieve a density normally associated with concrete.
Transport for Greater Manchester says additional services will be running across the network. The announcement has reassured nobody.
“We’ll have as many staff as possible available,” said one transport official, staring into the middle distance while calculating how many tram passengers can physically be compressed into a single carriage before science intervenes.
Metrolink services will operate every seven minutes, a schedule expected to collapse shortly after the first person stops in a doorway to check TikTok.
Meanwhile, Heaton Park station will close at 9pm, triggering the annual spectacle of thousands of exhausted festivalgoers being funnelled towards Bowker Vale like cattle that have collectively lost custody of their phones.
Drivers have also been warned to expect delays.
This advice was considered optimistic.
Traffic analysts predict average vehicle speeds around Heaton Park may fall below those of continental drift, with some motorists expected to spend so long on Bury Old Road that they qualify for council tax.
Parking restrictions will be strictly enforced, with unauthorised vehicles towed away and impounded. In a pilot scheme, several cars may simply be declared permanent public sculptures.
Greater Manchester Police will deploy specially trained officers under Project Servator, a counter-terrorism initiative designed to identify suspicious activity.
This year, however, officers have reportedly requested clarification on whether “a man wearing fairy wings, a traffic cone and no visible sense of self-preservation” still counts as suspicious during Parklife.
Residents living near the venue have begun final preparations for the weekend by boarding up expectations, cancelling plans and quietly accepting that every side street within three miles will become a temporary refugee camp for abandoned Uber passengers.
Emergency planners remain confident the city can cope.
“We’ve modelled every possible scenario,” said one source.
“The only thing we didn’t account for was people.”
By Sunday evening, organisers expect thousands of fans to have enjoyed a memorable weekend of music and sport, while thousands more will still be attempting to leave a car park, surviving on vape fumes, regret and the fading hope that movement might one day resume.
Reporting from down the M62.
