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London 2012 Olympics - Jun 2008 Media release
Start of construction works on the bridge:

25 June 2008
Construction of bridges underway as foundations are laid for an open and
accessible Olympic Park
Construction work is now underway on the permanent new bridges to be built
in the Olympic Park, the Olympic Delivery Authority (ODA) announced today.
The work will see the construction of more than 30 new bridges in the
Olympic Park to create new connections across the site and leave an open
and accessible area in legacy.
Balfour Beatty, one of the ODAs structures, bridges and highways
contractors, has now started work on the foundations of a permanent new
bridge in the centre of the Olympic Park. The bridge will span over Carpenters
Road to create an essential link for construction traffic between the
north and south of the site. The bridge will then become an important
part of the central pedestrian concourse through the middle of the Olympic
Park in Games time and legacy.
The start of works saw 290 cubic metres of concrete poured to create the
first foundations for the abutments of the bridge. Once the foundations
and bridge abutments are in place, 23 metre-long steel beams will be lifted
into place to form the deck of the bridge which will be operational for
construction traffic from November this year.
Balfour Beatty will also begin works later this summer on the huge land
bridge that will be the gateway to the Games, taking people from Stratford
International and Stratford Regional Stations into the Olympic Park. The
land-bridge will form part of the roof of the Aquatics Centre and will
be delivered by Balfour Beatty as part of its Aquatics Centre contract.
Abutment works on the Stratford City side of the bridge were completed
last year and Balfour Beatty will begin work later this summer on the
bridge abutments within the Olympic Park.
ODA Director of Infrastructure and Utilities Simon Wright said:
The start of bridgeworks is a significant moment and shows we are
planning for legacy from the very beginning as we start to create the
backbone of the Olympic Park and a platform for future development.
Building new bridges and roads is a crucial element across the life
of the project, from creating new links across the site for construction
activity, to delivering an open and accessible Park during the Games,
and forming new links between local communities in legacy.
The site of the Olympic Park is made up of fragmented pockets of land,
and in the past has suffered from poor connections between local communities.
The structures, bridges and highways project will see more than 30 bridges
and 20km of roads built in and around the Olympic Park to create new connections
across the site.
London Olympic
Buildings
WINNER ANNOUNCED IN OLYMPIC PARK FOOTBRIDGE DESIGN COMPETITION
London 2012 Olympics - Games mode

heneghan.peng.architects/©Archimation
The Olympic Delivery Authority (ODA) today announced that Heneghan Peng
Architects, with Adams Kara Taylor Engineers, has won the competition
to design one of the key footbridges in the centre of the Olympic Park.
The design competition, launched in May, was for multi-disciplined teams
to design the footbridge located on the central pedestrian concourse in
the Olympic Park. The footbridge spans 26m over the River Lea at a focal
point between the Olympic Stadium, Aquatics Centre and Basketball Arena.
The planning and design of the bridge will integrate both Games and legacy
use. During the Games the bridge will have a total width of 55 metres
to accommodate increased spectator numbers. After the Games temporary
sections of bridge will be removed leaving two narrower bridges that span
either side of Carpenters Lock, a unique 1930s historic structure
on the River Lea Waterway.
In June a six-strong shortlist of established designers, engineers and
emerging young practices were asked to develop concept design proposals
for the bridge and the immediate surrounding landscape in Games time and
legacy mode. Their designs were assessed by a specialist design jury who
selected the Irish based firm Heneghan Peng Architects as the design competition
winners.
Heneghan Pengs concept designs were praised by the design jury for
making the bridge a spectacle in Games mode by using the landscape for
colour and activity followed by the transformation of the structure in
legacy to leave two footbridges linked by a central blade-like walkway
offering views over the river and Carpenters Lock.
London 2012 Olympics - Legacy mode

heneghan.peng.architects/©Archimation
ODA Director of Infrastructure and Utilities Simon Wright said:
The winning team impressed the design jury with their understanding
of the need to plan Games and legacy together. Their designs will help
us lock-in legacy now by designing a bridge that meets Games-time needs
but which also leaves behind a striking structure in the heart of the
Olympic Park for future generations to enjoy.
The jury were impressed with all of the shortlisted teams but Heneghan
Pengs designs emerged as a clear favourite and will help us ensure
we continue to aim for the highest standards of design excellence across
the project.
Directors of Heneghan Peng Architects, Roisin Heneghan and Shih-Fu Peng,
said:
We are thrilled to have won this competition particularly after
being faced by such incredible opposition. We hope that our design will
form an important element within the spectacle of the London 2012 Games
and as a striking element of the enhanced connections the Olympic Park
will create in legacy.
The design competition jury included Sarah Buck, who recently took post
as the first female President of the Institution of Structural Engineers
(IStructE). Sarah Buck said:
"The same difficult challenge of designing a bridge with a width
greater than the span was tackled imaginatively and creatively by the
six short listed teams. Heneghan Peng and Adams Kara Taylor have produced
an inspired design using modern materials in a particularly innovative
way, especially for the legacy mode."
The design jury was particularly impressed with the way Heneghan Pengs
concept designs brought together a design solution that worked for both
Games and legacy. The short span of the footbridge gave Heneghan Peng
scope to develop a more creative design than a usual bridge structure
by using the surrounding landscape as a way of shaping the bridge structure
itself.
The jury also praised the proposals to open up the Carpenters Lock area,
creating new meeting spaces, views and links above and below the bridge
between the river tow paths, Carpenters Lock and the upper concourse in
the Olympic Park.
London Olympics Velodrome
London Olympics Aquatics
Centre
Following a strong response by more than 46 teams, the ODA shortlisted
six teams for the design competition in June:
· McDowell+Benedetti, Jane Wernick Associates, Craft Pegg and Sutton
Vane Associates, Richard Wentworth Artist
· Heneghan.Peng Architects and Adams Kara Taylor Engineers
· Ron Arad Associates, Buro Happold and Landscape Architects -
BBUK Studio
· Softroom, Eckersley O'Callaghan, Landuse, Atelier Ten and James
Bruges Studio
· Future Systems, Adams Kara Taylor, Rendel Palmer Tritton and
Lighting Design Partnership
· Tonkin Liu, Atelier One, Grant Associates and BDP Sustainability
The shortlisted teams were assessed by a Design Jury comprising:
· Carl Ainley British Waterways
· Bob Allies Allies and Morrison
· Peter Bishop Design for London
· Sarah Buck BSW Consulting, President IStructE
· Ricky Burdett ODA Principal Design Advisor
· Jorgen Nissen Bridge Consultant
· Kevin Owen LOCOG
· Simon Wright - ODA Director of Infrastructure and Utilities
More than 30 bridges, temporary and permanent, will be built in and around
the Olympic Park in total
London Olympics
2012 - off-site venues
London Olympics
site : Lower Lee valley
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