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Making the 2012 Olympics sustainable. Introduction. Our task was to plan and design a sustainable London 2012 Olympics. We had to re-design the Olympic ground where all of the stadiums and the Olympic village are situated. We have also drawn out the plans and each done an individual stadium.
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Introduction • Our task was to plan and design a sustainable London 2012 Olympics. We had to re-design the Olympic ground where all of the stadiums and the Olympic village are situated. We have also drawn out the plans and each done an individual stadium.
Bmx and mountain bike stadium pictures This is the Bmx and mountain bike plans for the Olympics and here is my redesign stadium.
Bmx and mountain bike stadium • I chose my plans for the stadium because it will be safe and be able to hold a lot of people too and will be use as a centre of excellence for the people to use after the Olympics. The track I have design has got tight corners and humps to make it harder but there is no artist impression of what the inside of the real stadium will look like.
Aquatics centrepictures • Here is a picture of my design
Aquatics centre • I designed the aquatic centre like this because it has all the swimming pools needed in a neat and tidy way. It has two 50 metre pools, one diving pool and a pool that is used after the Olympics for the public. It has a flume but isn’t as big as the 50 metre pools. It will be used for all the swimming events such as Diving, Swimming, Synchronised Swimming, Paralympic Swimming and Modern Pentathlon. It has all the facilities for these sports. • The centre they are building now is different to my design because it all fits together very well and uses the space well. The outside might not be as beautiful as the one now but it is practical, has a glass roof and is in the shape of a wave. • The aquatic centre now does not have a flume, which mine does. This is what most people want in a public swimming pool. It appeals to children and is family friendly so it would be used all the time not just neglected after the Olympics.
Environment The Olympic park is being built in a run down area, Newham. Its on a brownfield site, this is because they are going to change it and regenerate the site so it’s a nicer, greener and cleaner place. They are recycling 97% of the waste materials, they are also planting over 4,000 trees, 74,000 plants, 60,000 bulbs and 300,000 wetland plants. This makes this one of the UK’s largest planting projects. All the pylons will be moved to the underground to make the environment look nicer. 200,000 cubic metres of underground pylons are being built - enough to fill Wembley stadium – 52 pylons have already been removed from above ground and 150km of overhead wires have been removed also. The rivers in Newham now are polluted, but the team are working to clean out the rivers to make them clean, Once its clean people are more likely to keep it that way. They will use a dreading programme; the dreading programme has already removed 30,000 tonnes of silt, gravel, rubble, tyres, shopping trolleys, limber and at least one motor car.
Olympic stadium pictures • This is the current Olympic stadium design. I think that my Olympic stadium design is more aesthetic, and thus will bring in more money. It has more drinks and snack bars, which will go towards making up for that £9 billion loss…
Hockey And Handball Stadium Outside I chose this design for my building because it is simple and suitable for wheelchair users. My design has two entrances and two exits so that there is enough room for everyone to get in and out of the stadium easily and it has a convertible roof so that it is suitable for all types of weather.
Inside As you walk inside the stadium you come to some steps. You have a choice of walking up the steps if your seat is high up or you can walk through the passage way if your seat is low to the ground.