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January 31, 2006
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Images Courtesy London 2012
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London has taken the next step toward
realizing its 2012 Olympics construction plans. On January
17, Londons interim Olympic Delivery Authority announced
that the master planning team responsible for the citys
bid last year, including Foreign Office Architects, HOK Sport,
Buro Happold, Allies & Morrison, WS Atkins, and Arup,
will also develop Londons Olympic Park. The design of
the parks eight venues will be tendered separately,
and this team will design all the infrastructure elements,
including the roads, landscape, bridges and waterways.
The Olympic park will be built in Stratford, a neighborhood
in East London. As detailed in Londons Olympic bid,
it will feature nine new venues, including Zaha Hadids
Aquatic Centre (which is already in development), an 80,000-seat
Olympic Stadium, an Olympic village, a velodrome, and a media
center. Several stadiums which can be deconstructed and placed
elsewhere after the games will also be constructed here.
The games organizers have demonstrated that the areas
long-term legacy, which has always been at the core of their
vision, is still high on their agenda. Updated plans for the
park move it closer to Stratford City, a new business district
and transport hub in Stratford. Plans for it include up to
1.5 million square feet of retail space, 1 million square
feet of office space, and 500 houses. The park will now be
closer to transport links, and will avoid an area of land
that, if developed, would require the relocation of residents
and businesses. The overall Olympic plan already includes
$141.5 billion in government expenditures for the redevelopment
of the now-depressed Lower Lea Valley area, where the Park
is located.
Lucy Bullivant
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