Work started this morning on a huge art installation on the Stray to commemorate NHS staff and care workers and those who have lost their lives through coronavirus.
The piece, called In Memoriam, is set to be complete for its official opening on Friday.
Volunteers are using red and white flags to assess where the various pieces will go, close to the centre of West Park Stray.
Award-winning artist Luke Jerram designed the exhibit, which will be on the Stray until June 7. It will then be moved to Edinburgh, Fleetwood and Weston-super-Mare.

Ben Osborne (left), on behalf of the artist Luke Jerram, and Adam Long, on behalf of Harrogate International Festivals.
In Memoriam measures 36 metres in diameter and features more than 100 flags made from hospital bed sheets arranged in the form of a medical symbol.
This is the first in a series of installations and events delivered in the months ahead by Harrogate International Festivals, which this year celebrates its 55th anniversary.

How the artwork will look on Friday.
Sharon Canavar, Harrogate International Festivals chief executive, said
“Two years ago, we were lucky enough to bring Luke’s Museum of the Moon to St Wilfrid’s Church, which was one of the highlights of that summer’s international festival, and was visited by more than 10,000 people.
“As an arts charity delivering festivals and events, we were first to close and will be the last to open, but we can’t just open the doors on our venues and go straight back to normal.
“We wanted to create something unique in Harrogate that acknowledged the last year whilst allowing us to create a safe, outdoor event for the town.
“We don’t want people to just look at In Memoriam from afar, we want people to experience it; we want individuals, families and friends to walk into the heart of it; we want them to sit under the flags and quietly reflect the events of the last 15 months.”
In Memoriam is being supported by Hornbeam Park, Harrogate BID, and Swainsons Funeral Directors.
Mobile testing site opens in Harrogate car park for first timeA mobile testing site has opened in Harrogate today for the first time and is set to be there three days a week “until further notice”.
NHS test and trace staff set up the site this morning at West Park car park on Tower Street.
The car park will close on Monday, Tuesday and Thursday each week for testing.
It comes as workers continue to dismantle the permanent testing centre in the Dragon Road car park near Asda, which closed on Sunday (May 23).
Health officials announced in March that the Dragon Road site would close as the Harrogate Convention Centre. The centre said it needs the space for parking.
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The move from a permanent centre to a mobile unit is a further sign that the emergency response to the pandemic is scaling back.
Matthew Robinson, head of resilience and emergencies at North Yorkshire County Council, said:
“The advantages of mobile testing sites is that we can flex and strengthen as we go.
“If cases are increasing in a particular area we will continue to provide more frequent testing in that location.”

The site at the Dragon Road car park is now closed.
This follows news that the vaccination centres in Harrogate and Ripon will also close in August.
Local pharmacy sites in Knaresborough and Pateley Bridge will play a larger part in the vaccine roll out.
For more information on testing go to www.northyorks.gov.uk/book-coronavirus-covid-19-test-if-youve-got-symptoms
All Harrogate district social distancing planters and cones up for reviewAll street planters and cones used to promote social distancing in the Harrogate district are set to be reviewed next month.
North Yorkshire County Council (NYCC) has confirmed that the measures will remain in place until the review, which is due to be held at the end of June.
It comes amid growing calls for their removal in the form of a petition and a group of businesses in Knaresborough.
Read more:
- Harrogate social distancing measures to be reviewed next month
- Knaresborough businesses call for social distancing cones to go
Those people believe that Harrogate and Knaresborough need parking spaces more than the social distancing enforcements as the lockdown eases.
The county council closed off parking bays in the towns at the start of the pandemic to give pedestrians more room to spread out.
Under the Government’s roadmap, all social distancing measures are set to be dropped on June 21. That is around the time NYCC will hold its review.
A council spokesperson said:
Knaresborough businesses call for social distancing cones to go“We can confirm all social distancing measures will be in place until the review at the end of June.
“We have met regularly with local councillors and representatives from the town council and chamber of trade over the past 12 months to ensure that the social distancing measures in place are appropriate.
“No businesses have sent us a request to remove them.”
Three Knaresborough businesses have united to call for the removal of the social distancing cones in the town centre.
The traffic cones have been in place on the High Street since the start of the pandemic but some traders and residents feel now is time for them to go.
The government is due to drop all social distancing measures next month in the final step of the roadmap out of lockdown.
However, three business owners told the Stray Ferret the cones should be removed as soon as possible so disc parking spaces can be restored.
Read more:
- Just one covid case reported in Harrogate district
- Harrogate social distancing measures to be reviewed next month
Hairdresser Kelly Teggin, who owns a shop on Castlegate, told the Stray Ferret:
“The car parking spaces are needed more than the room they provide for social distancing.
“When I have stood on the High Street and watched, I do not see anyone using the cones to walk around others anymore.
“But in the last few weeks when it has been busy in town, nearly all of my clients were 20 minutes late because they could not find a parking space.”
Jordan Thompson, who owns Harriets Clothing, also said:
“We need normality back and we need parking available so people can come and spend their money in time like they used to do.
“Now is the time for them to go. They are very ugly and people drive into them all the time.”
The president of Knaresborough Chamber of Trade and barber shop owner, Steve Teggin, added his frustration:
“If you look at the High Street and the rest of town, it is still very quiet. A lot of people are still affected by the lack of parking.
“Unfortunately, we are losing customers to Harrogate so we have got to stop that now.”
The businesses called for people who agree to reach out to councillor David Goode, who represents Knaresborough on North Yorkshire County Council, the highways authority, by emailing him here.
The Stray Ferret asked North Yorkshire County Council whether it was considering the removal of the cones but did not receive a reply by the time of publication.
Harrogate salon turns away woman despite face mask exemptionA Ripon woman has said she is being discriminated against after a hair salon turned her away even though she has a face mask exemption.
Jan Spence, 58, has chronic asthma and anxiety so she wears a lanyard around her neck to let other people know why she does not wear a face mask.
Ms Spence recently visited Moo Hair in Harrogate to use a voucher she bought before lockdown. However, when she arrived the hairdresser she was booked to see refused to let her in.
It is something Ms Spence has not experienced before and she told the Stray Ferret she did not want to experience it again so she decided to speak out to raise awareness. She said:
“I felt really degraded, I cannot help having a health condition. It can be quite debilitating at times.
“So it was upsetting when I was turned away. I have had both coronavirus jabs and I had a negative lateral flow test in the morning so what else can I do?”
When Ms Spence approached Groupon, which she bought the voucher through, the customer services team gave her credit to spend on something else.
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Caroline Allen, who owns the salon on Cheltenham Mount, operates a policy that everyone has to wear a face mask to be allowed inside.
Ms Allen told the Stray Ferret her rule was designed to keep staff and clients safe:
Harrogate and Ripon vaccine centres to close in August“We are all learning here. We have never lived through anything like this before. I go by the rules set out by the central body for hairdressers and barbers.
“I have to protect everybody in the salon, we get some very vulnerable clients in here so we all wear face masks.
“It can put me in a very difficult position but it is one I am going to stick by. I am sorry that Jan is so upset.”
The vaccination centres at the Great Yorkshire Showground in Harrogate and Ripon Races will close in August after clinical leaders decided they were no longer needed.
The two GP-led sites have administered more than 120,000 jabs so far. The Harrogate centre will close on August 13 and the Ripon site will close on August 31.
The pharmacy-led centres in Knaresborough and Pateley Bridge are set to play a larger role in the vaccine rollout as a result.
NHS England believes the pharmacy sites, along with regional vaccine hubs in Leeds and York, will provide more than enough capacity to administer vaccines after August.
Read more:
- Knaresborough vaccine site cancels all appointments for today’s clinic
- Giant public artwork coming to the Stray remembers NHS covid dead
Dr Chris Preece, a GP partner at Church Lane Surgery in Boroughbridge and clinical director of the Knaresborough and Rural District Primary Care Network, said the vaccination programme in the Harrogate District had been “phenomenally successful”. He added:
“As the programme moves towards vaccinating younger and more mobile cohorts, we’re already seeing evidence that people are choosing to travel to one of the larger, regional vaccination hubs, rather than waiting to be contacted by their GP practice.
“We would like to place on record our extreme gratitude to the Yorkshire Events Centre and Ripon Racecouse for their support and the generous use of their facilities.”
Dr Ian Dilley, a GP partner at East Parade Surgery in Harrogate and clinical director of the Mowbray Square Primary Care Network added:
“With the huge number of people now vaccinated in the local area, we feel August is an appropriate end date.
“We need to be mindful of the other pressures that will be placed on doctors’ surgeries as we head towards autumn and winter, and the annual flu vaccine campaigns that GP practices need to provide.
“We also need to enable our kind hosts at the Yorkshire Events Centre and Ripon Racecourse to provide their own events as restrictions continue to be eased and more public events are permitted.”
The primary care networks will continue to run vaccination clinics from both the Harrogate and Ripon sites for the next three months,
Knaresborough vaccine site cancels all appointments for today’s clinicThe vaccination centre in Knaresborough cancelled all appointments for today’s clinic due to staff problems.
The site, run by Homecare Pharmacy Services at the former Lidl supermarket, needs to have a pharmacist present at all times to oversee injections.
But the pharmacist scheduled to attend today was unable able to make it so the clinic was cancelled.
Jason Baskind, managing director of Homecare Pharmacy Services, told the Stray Ferret:
“We did not have too many people signed up today but we did have to cancel the clinic today. Most people did get a notification but unfortunately some did not.
“The pharmacist was not able to attend so it cannot go ahead. As part of our contract we have to have a pharmacist on site.
“But we will be back tomorrow and for the rest of the week, including the weekend.”
Read more:
- ‘Let’s crack on’: Knaresborough and Pateley vaccine sites reopen
- Giant public artwork coming to the Stray remembers NHS covid dead
The vaccine centre reopened last weekend and administered 1,800 jabs after supply shortages forced it to close for almost a month.
The site, which is now able to give both the Pfizer-BioNTech and Oxford-AstraZeneca jabs, is set to re-open tomorrow for the rest of the week.
It aims to give an average of 1,000 jabs a day.
Harrogate outdoor diners eager to eat indoors next weekPeople who have braved the turbulent weather over the last month eating out in the Harrogate district are keen to head indoors next week.
Restaurants and pubs are able to throw open their doors from Monday under the latest easing of coronavirus restrictions.
While those we have spoken to have made the most of the outdoor dining experience, they have had to wrap up warm and dodge heavy rain at times.
Are you looking forward to eating and drinking indoors next week?
A further five coronavirus cases have been reported in the Harrogate district, according to figures from Public Health England.
Today’s cases take the total in the district since the pandemic began to 7,734.
Meanwhile, the district’s seven-day covid rate stands at 19.3 per 100,000 people. This is slightly above the North Yorkshire average which is 18.8.
The England rate is currently 22.9.
Read more:
- Yorkshire Air Ambulance invests £15 million in its helicopter fleet
- A major art installation is coming to the Stray to remember NHS staff and care workers lost to covid
No further deaths from patients who tested positive for covid have been reported at Harrogate District Hospital.
According to NHS England statistics, the death toll remains at 179.
The last reported death at the hospital was on April 11.
‘Let’s crack on’: Knaresborough and Pateley vaccine sites reopenTwo vaccine centres in the Harrogate district are reopening after a month of supply issues slowed the rollout.
Homecare Pharmacy Services‘ clinic in the former Lidl car park in Knaresborough will operate on Saturday for the first time since April 17.
When it re-opens the pharmacy staff will be giving both the Pfizer-Biontech and Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccines.
It will be open five days a week but the owners hope eventually to be open seven days a week.
Read more:
- No more first vaccines in Harrogate district until June, leaked letter reveals
- Harrogate district first covid vaccine doses near 100,000
Jason Baskind, managing director of Homecare Pharmacy Services, told the Stray Ferret:
“The last clinic we held was without a doubt the best so far. The team gelled well, there were no queues and we managed to give out 1,219 jabs.
“It was frustrating that we had to close after that but now we are back and we are ready to go, so let’s crack on.”
Pateley Bridge’s vaccine centre is also starting to see supplies come through. It opened on Wednesday this week to administer about 400 jabs.
The site, run by Pateley Bridge Pharmacy, had been in talks with the NHS about using the Pfizer-Biontech vaccine, which is more difficult to store.
However, because the site is small the owners did not want to risk wasting vaccines so it is sticking solely to Oxford-AstraZeneca.
The outlook has improved compared to last month, when a letter leaked to the Stray Ferret said there would be no more first doses for a while due to shortages.