The Barnes Trail, a 2.3-mile circular walk funded by the
Mayor of London and
Richmond upon Thames Council, was opened in June 2013. It gained in 2014 a further
QR code-marked extension, along its riverside, which equates to the Thames Path National Trail; part of this is wide, pavemented embankments with Victorian townhouses and the rest is tree-lined green space. The site of rock musician
Marc Bolan's fatal car crash on Queen's Ride in 1977 is now
Bolan's Rock Shrine. The memorial receives frequent visits from his fans, and in 1997 a bronze bust of Bolan was installed to mark the twentieth anniversary of his death. In 2007, the site was recognised by the
English Tourist Board as a "Site of Rock 'n' Roll Importance" in its guide
England Rocks. Facing the Thames, and on the main commercial street's junction, the
Bull's Head pub was also one of the first
jazz venues in Britain, and now hosts live music in an attached music room with capacity for 80 people. The
OSO Arts Centre, which opened in 2002, is a venue for art and
fringe theatre, hosting numerous exhibitions and theatre productions, as well as a regular auction. The building was previously the postal sorting office, but was redeveloped into a mixture of residential and commercial space with the first residents moving there in 1999. The area around Barnes Pond is host to several open-air and covered markets each month. Barnes Green is the site of the Barnes
Fair, held each year on the second Saturday of July and organised by the Barnes Community Association (BCA), whose headquarters are at
Rose House, a distinctive 17th-century pink-painted building on Barnes High Street. In 2015, Barnes Pond became home to London's largest dedicated children's book event, the Barnes Children's Literature Festival, which is now the second largest in Europe.
Olympic Studios Olympic Studios on Church Road is an
independent cinema, showing a mixture of films on general release and art films. Originally a local cinema and for many years a leading recording studio, down the decades Olympic played host to some of the greatest stars in the history of popular music. In 1967's
Summer of Love, it was at Olympic in Barnes that
the Beatles conceived the first parts and ideas of "
All You Need Is Love", one of the most influential popular songs in modern history, which debuted a fortnight later in
Our World, the first ever global satellite broadcast to millions worldwide.
The Rolling Stones later went on to become such frequent visitors that
Mick Jagger gradually designed part of the studio's features himself, while
Jimi Hendrix also spent a significant proportion of his entire recording career in the quiet surroundings of Barnes, recording tracks for all three of his studio albums there.
Led Zeppelin recorded their debut album and much other material at the studio, from the late 1960s into the mid-1970s.
The Who,
Queen,
Pink Floyd,
David Bowie,
Ray Charles,
Eric Clapton,
Shirley Bassey,
Ella Fitzgerald,
Harry Nilsson,
the Verve,
Massive Attack,
Duran Duran,
Coldplay,
Prince,
Madonna,
Adele, and
Björk were among the many other visitors. ==Places of worship==