2012 Summer Olympic venues
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2012 Summer Olympics |
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The 2012 Summer Olympic venues are mostly located in the host city of London, though some other events require facilities located elsewhere. Since the successful bid for the 2012 Summer Olympics, some details have changed, with ongoing developments and announcements taking place.
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[edit] Sporting venues
The 2012 Olympics will use a mixture of newly built venues, existing facilities, and temporary facilities, some of them in well known locations such as Hyde Park and Horse Guards Parade. In the wake of the problems that plagued the Millennium Dome, the intention is that there will be no white elephants after the games. Some of the new facilities will be reused in their Olympic form, while others will be reduced in size and several will be relocated elsewhere in the UK. The plans will contribute to the regeneration of Stratford in east London which will be the site of the Olympic Park, and of the neighbouring Lower Lea Valley.
However this will require the compulsory purchase of some business properties, which would be demolished to make way for Olympic venues and infrastructure improvements. This has caused controversy, with some of the effected proprietors claiming that the compensation offered is inadequate. In addition, concerns about the development's potential impact on the future of the century-old Manor Garden Allotments have inspired a community campaign.
The majority of venues have been divided into three zones within Greater London: the Olympic Zone, the River Zone and the Central Zone. In addition to these are those venues that, by necessity, are outside the boundaries of Greater London.
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) noted that future negotiations were necessary to ensure the use of the Old Trafford and Villa Park football stadiums. The need for compulsory purchase orders was also highlighted as a possible problem for the Olympic Park, but did not expect this to cause any "undue delay to construction schedules".
[edit] Olympic Zone
The Olympic Zone will encompass all of the facilities within the 500 acre (2 km²) Olympic Park in Stratford. This park will be developed on existing waste and industrial land, at grid reference TQ379849, and will be just seven minutes by Olympic Javelin train from central London. The park will contain:
- The Olympic Stadium, which will host the track and field athletics events as well as the opening and closing ceremonies with a planned capacity of 80,000.
- The Aquatics Centre, which will host diving, swimming, synchronised swimming and water polo and will have a spectator capacity of 15,000 for swimming and 5,000 for diving.
- The London Velopark, which will include a 6,000 seat indoor velodrome for track cycling and a 6,000 seat outdoor BMX racing track.
- The Olympic Hockey Centre, with 15,000 and 5,000 seat arenas, which will host the hockey.
- Three indoor arenas (Olympic Park Arenas 1-3), which will host basketball, fencing, volleyball, handball, and the fencing and shooting disciplines of the modern pentathlon.
- Olympic Park Arena 1 - basketball, modern pentathlon
- Olympic Park Arena 2 - handball
- Olympic Park Arena 3 - fencing
- The Olympic Village, with accommodation for all athletes and team officials (some 17,320 beds in total). After the games the village will be a become a district of the Stratford City development, a multi-billion pound development project on the former railway goods yard to the east of the Olympic Park. (Accredited technical officials—referees, umpires, etc.—will be housed in hotel space in London's Docklands).
- The Olympic Press and Broadcast Centres.
- A tennis training centre.
[edit] River Zone
The River Zone will feature five main venues in the Thames Gateway area straddling the River Thames:
- The ExCeL Exhibition Centre, for boxing, judo, table tennis, taekwondo, weightlifting, and wrestling. Four separate arenas will be used with capacities between 6,000 and 10,000.
- The Millennium Dome (or O2 Arena) and Greenwich Arena, for badminton, basketball, and gymnastics. The Millenium Dome should host around 20,000 spectators with the temporary arena holding 6,000.
- Greenwich Park, for equestrianism.
- The Royal Artillery Barracks, for shooting.
[edit] Central Zone
The Central Zone will be formed out of all the remaining venues within Greater London. They are quite widely spread across central and West London:
- The new 90,000 seat Wembley Stadium for the football finals.
- The All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club at Wimbledon for tennis.
- Lord's Cricket Ground for archery.
- Regent's Park for road cycling. The park was also the proposed venue for the dropped baseball and softball events.
- Horse Guards Parade for beach volleyball.
- Hyde Park for the triathlon.
- Earls Court for the volleyball.
[edit] Outside Greater London
Three of the venues will be just outside Greater London:
- Weald Country Park, Essex for mountain biking
- Broxbourne, Hertfordshire for canoe/kayak slalom
- Dorney Lake, near Windsor, for rowing and canoe/kayak flatwater.
The Weymouth and Portland National Sailing Academy, in Portland Harbour, Dorset on the south coast of England, will be used for the sailing events. It is around 120 miles (192km) from central London.
The earlier stages of the football competition will be played at football stadia around the country including:
- Hampden Park in Glasgow
- Millennium Stadium in Cardiff
- Old Trafford in Manchester
- St James' Park in Newcastle
- Villa Park in Birmingham
- Windsor Park in Belfast
[edit] The Olympic village
- The village will have 17,320 beds and provide each athlete with 16m² floor space.
- Each apartment will have a TV, internet access, a private courtyard.
- The dining hall will cater for 5,500 athletes at a time.
[edit] Transport and infrastructure
Public transport, an aspect of the bid which scored poorly in the IOC's initial evaluation, will see numerous improvements, including the expansion of the London Underground's East London Line, upgrades to the Docklands Light Railway and the North London Line, and the new "Olympic Javelin" service. It is almost impossible to assess how many of the proposed improvements would have happened in any case. The games were won without a commitment to deliver Crossrail by 2012. This is the largest transport project proposed for London, and it was widely assumed in the early stages of the bidding process that the games could not be won without a guarantee that it would be completed before the games.
During the games 80% of athletes will be within 20 minutes of their events and 97% will be within 30 minutes of their events. It is estimated that 80% of spectators will arrive by rail. Together, all the planned heavy rail, light rail, and underground services (excluding Crossrail) are expected to deliver around 240 trains every hour.
[edit] Further details
- 93% of training venues are to be within 30 minutes of the athletes' village.
- The aim is for 90% of venues to be served by three or more forms of public transport.
- There will be two major park and ride sites off the M25 with a combined capacity of 12,000 cars, within 25 minutes of the Olympic Park.
- There are 9,000 planned park and ride spaces to be made available at Ebbsfleet where spectators can board a 10-minute javelin service to the Olympic Park. This is the same station where continental spectators travelling by Eurostar will join the Olympic Javelin to the Olympic Park.
- It is predicted that on event days 78% of spectators are likely to travel from within London and 22% from the rest of the UK and Europe.
- Organisers estimate 80% of visitors and staff of the Games will use rail services to reach the Olympic Park.
- Low or no-emission vehicles will be used to transport Olympic athletes and officials.
[edit] Changes to the original bid
Regent's Park was planned to host the softball and baseball events, but the IOC chose not to run those events.
On 7 June 2006, a revised masterplan for the Olympic Park was announced. The most major change was the relocation of the Volleyball from a new Olympic Arena to the existing venue of Earls Court. The revision also involved the re-organisation of the park shuffling the Basketball, Cycling, Fencing, Tennis and Hockey venues in addition to the Press and Broadcast Centre. This move was designed to remove the need for the relocation of 80 businesses and to provide a more coherent legacy for the sporting venues.
[edit] References
- ↑ . AllwaysTouchout.com (2005). Olympics. Retrieved November 27, 2005.
[edit] External link
- View the Olympic Park on Google Maps (photographed in 2005)