Work to repair damage to an Oxford park after equipment used at an annual charity fireworks display wrecked saturated ground is set to cost up to £10,000.
Oxford City Council announced details about the work to South Park late last month - but did not include any figures suggesting how much it might cost.
A freedom of information request returned to the OI this week showed the authority predicts the work could hit £10,000.
Any charges will be met by the Oxford Round Table charity, which paid the council £3,150 to use the park when the damage happened.
About 25,000 people attended the event on 4 November and the charity said it has donated more than £1m to good causes by running the displays since 1967.
The authority said work had established there was no long-term damage inflicted to the park’s grounds.
It said it had worked with Oxford Round Table and other “local stakeholders”, including the Friends of South Park and Oxford Preservation Trust.
It said it was "continuing to hold discussions with stakeholders and Oxford Round Table" about future charity displays.
"Discussions are ongoing about how lessons can be learned for future events, and how such damage can be avoided in future as we face increasingly wet winters," the council added.
Work will take place in three stages - at the park’s top and driest part, in its "middle section" and the lowest, wettest part of the park.
Another hearing will take place for a councillor accused of failing to tell the authority he sits on about changes of circumstances that would have affected his council tax reduction.
Colin Dingwall, 73, represents Hailey, Minster Lovell and Leafield on West Oxfordshire District Council (WODC).
He is accused by WODC of three counts of behaving contrary to regulation 8(1) of the council tax reduction schemes (detection of fraud and enforcement) (England) regulations 2013.
A hearing will be held at Oxford Magistrates’ Court on 22 March for Mr Dingwall, of Foxburrow Lane, Crawley, to vacate guilty pleas he made there on 5 February.
He was given unconditional bail.
Developers have been given permission to build up to 230 new homes in Heyford Park following an appeal.
Cherwell District Council refused the application in March 2023 but it was permitted on Tuesday following a planning inquiry.
The authority said the development would have had a "poor and incongruous relationship" with homes nearby.
But planning inspector Helen Hockenhull said the project should go ahead and that they would cause "no harm" to the Upper Heyford Conservation Area.
The developers involved in the project include Birmingham-based Richborough Estates and Lone Star Land Ltd.