Access All Areas March 2020 | Page 30

MARCH | COVER FEATURE with the first flats being built there as part of a major project. The East Bank site, meanwhile, is among the area’s most impressive accomplishments. It will bring an additional 1.5 million visitors to the Park and surrounding area each year and more than 2,500 jobs will be created in East Bank, and an estimated £1.5bn generation for the local economy. This is thanks to Sadler's Wells East which will open as a 550-seat theatre, UAL's London College of Fashion, which will accommodate 6,500 students and V&A East, which will display its world-famous collections at two sites with a new museum at Stratford Waterfront and the V&A Collection and Research at Here East. Meanwhile, a state-of-the-art BBC music studios will provide a hub from which to celebrate music of all genres and UCL will create a new campus, UCL East, providing innovation in areas such as robotics, smart cities, culture and conservation, for around 4,000 students. The area’s new and improved roads, railways, and upcoming Crossrail service will also boost these institutions. All this would not have been economically viable without the ‘event-factor’, says Tudor: “The Olympics and its legacy are what bought the impetus for this major investment. It was otherwise a very arduous and costly area to regenerate. It was contaminated, had a lot of pylons, safety considerations and waterways that needed crossings. It would’ve been too costly to do this as a normal regeneration project.” And, yet, the cultural and economic benefits are being realised. “The Major League Baseball weekend alone gave the UK £47m in economic impact, then there’s the office blocks, which include the Financial Conduct 30 Authority, and bring in 25,000 workers and a £1.3bn benefit to the area. Former London Mayor Ken Livingstone said he wasn’t interested in two weeks of sport, he was interested in what it would do for the area.” From the outset, London’s proposition was unique, says Tudor: “Different Olympics have different parks, and we ended up with a lovely 560 acre park. For the upcoming Tokyo 2020 (24 July - 9 August) the Games are much more spread out and they’re even re-using some venues from their 1968 Games. London, in contrast, only re-used one venue from its 1948 Games: Wembley Arena, which in those days was a swimming pool, but in 2012 was used for badminton.” Making sure your event in the Park is greenlighted involves much co-ordination. Each venue has its own operator, and for the Park your first port of call is often Sara-Ellen Williams, who has been the Park’s head of events for seven years, and originally was head of casting for the ceremonies. “She has some great stories from her time organising the Opening Ceremony,” says Tudor. “With her team she manages the calendar and makes sure everything fits together – how events can run in parallel across the Park, and working with the venue management teams on how the wider issues of licensing and construction will be affected. It’s very easy to just say ‘yes do your event here’, but there’s more to it. There’s a cumulative impact across the Park, and it’s about keeping residents happy and ensuring the quality of the destination. “When the Major League Baseball is on in the Stadium, for example, we also have Pro League Hockey in the North of the park, and a big community event… and it’s also the opening weekend of the UEFA European Championships, so there’s "It would’ve been too costly to do this as a normal regeneration project" much to consider across the city.” Access’ tour ends at the top of the Anish Kapoor-designed ArcelorMittal Orbit, which doubles as an event venue in its own right. Up here we get a full panorama of the Olympic site, which eight years on, has housed as many memories as the Games itself. Meanwhile, the vast numbers of cranes and construction work going on around us is testament that much more is to come. STRUCTURED LEGACY Ben Keast, managing director, Neptunus The 2012 Olympics and ParaOlympics are still the greatest occasions the UK events industry has produced. Over the last eight years, Neptunus has provided structures across the Olympic Park for numerous events ranging from science fairs to the Major League Baseball and international hockey tournaments, including both the Men’s and Women’s World Cups. The differing applications has allowed Neptunus to maintain the quality of our Olympic offering as well as utilising the diversity of our product range.