|
|
London Olympics Substation, Building, News, Image, Proposal, Architect, Design
Olympic Park Substation, London
2012 London Olympics Construction Progress, England, UK
26 Oct 2009
London 2012 powers ahead as first Olympic Park building is complete
New substation switched on to supply electricity to Olympic Park and
Stratford City development
The first building on the Olympic Park has been completed the Olympic
Delivery Authority (ODA) confirmed today as EDF Energy completed
work on a new Primary Electrical Substation that will supply electricity
to the Olympic Park and the Stratford City development.

The Electrical Substation is located in Kings Yard in the west
of the Olympic Park and will distribute electricity across the Olympic
Park and Stratford City site through new electrical networks consisting
of more than 100km of electrical cabling. The substation is designed,
constructed, owned and operated by EDF Energy through its wholly
owned subsidiary Lea Valley Utilities (LVU).
Construction work which began in December 2007 and is now complete,
making the substation the first building to reach this stage on
the Olympic Park. The substation is now operational and will start
supplying electricity to the Stratford City site next month, with
the Olympic Stadium set to be the first Olympic Park venue to receive
electricity early next year. The substation was officially switched
on today by the EDF Energy Networks Managing Director Laurent Ferrari
and ODA Director of Infrastructure and Utilities Simon Wright.
ODA Director of Utilities and Infrastructure Simon Wright said:
"Completing the first building on the Olympic Park site on
schedule is a major milestone and shows that we are making good
progress not only on the main sporting venues for 2012 but also
on the backbone of essential new utilities infrastructure. The electricity
substation will serve the lifetime of the 2012 project - powering
construction work on the Olympic Park site, serving venues during
the Games in 2012, and delivering essential new services for generations
to come."
Laurent Ferrari, Managing Director, EDF Energy Networks, said:
"As the first London 2012 sustainability partner and energy
utilities partner, we are delighted to have completed work on the
network hub that will help power the regeneration of the Olympic
Park. This marks a key phase in our development of the site, which
has already seen the skyline of East London transformed with the
removal of more than 50 electricity pylons.
"Through the sustainability features that are embedded in this
building, we are also helping to ensure that London 2012 is both a
truly sustainable Games and a force for change that will deliver a
legacy for the local community long after the Games have ended."

Mayor of Tower Hamlets Councillor Ahmed Omer said: "I am delighted
to be here today as we mark the completion and activation of the
first building to be completed on the Olympic Park. Although it
is not as exciting to most people as some of the other structures
currently underway such as the Olympic Stadium itself or the Aquatics
Centre, which is already looking fantastic, it is equally as important,
as without this, the Olympic Park would not be able to function
effectively."
The completion of work on the substation follows the good progress
being made on the wider utilities networks and infrastructure being
built across the Olympic Park site.
The Electrical Substation takes power from the upstream 132,000
volt electrical network outside the Olympic Park site. Main transformers
within the substation then 'step-down' the power to 11,000 volts
so that it can be distributed and used by venues and buildings across
the Park and in the Stratford City development.
A clear emphasis was put on the architectural designs of the electrical
substation to ensure the structure fit in with the design of the
wider Olympic Park. The electrical substation was designed by EDF
Energy with specialist support from Andrews Associates for the structural
design elements and NORD Architecture (a Glasgow-based practice
that won the prestigious Young Architect of the Year Award in 2006)
for the external architectural features.
The external substation architecture was designed as a dark brick
building to create a sense of solidity appropriate to the building's
role as a key part of the utilities infrastructure in the Olympic
Park. The use of dark brick in the designs also reflects the traditional
use of dark brick stock as window and corner details on the former
Kings Yard industrial buildings on the site where the new substation
has been built.
Sustainability is at the heart of the plans and the construction
of the substation reused crushed materials from the demolition of
the former Kings Yard buildings in the Olympic Park. The building
also includes a 'brown roof' which involves crushed materials laid
down on a flat roof which allow species to colonise naturally. The
brown roof will help enhance the ecological value and biodiversity
of the Olympic Park site by attracting local wildlife including
black redstarts, a rare bird that thrives on brownfield land.
EDF Energy is also working with the London Organising Committee of
the Olympic Games (LOCOG) to develop a low-carbon fuel solution for
the flame of the Olympic Cauldron and Torch and the electricity that
EDF Energy supplies to LOCOG during Games-time will come from renewable
sources.

London Olympics Substation - Building Information
More than 130,000 bricks were used in the construction of the substation
More than 200 piles were installed up to 19m into the ground to form
the foundations for the building
The Electricity Substation will house 132/11kV transformers, each
weighing 110 tonnes, as well as 11,000 switchgear and auxiliary equipment
The building is 80m-long and 14m-wide. The building height varies
- the highest point being 15.9m at the Western end and lowest point
is 4.875m in central portion of the building
The substation will distribute electricity across the Olympic Park
and Stratford City site through new electrical networks consisting
of more than 100km of electrical cabling - enough to cover 250 laps
of the Olympic Stadium track
The substation's eastern tower was designed to be lower in height
to avoid blocking a viewing corridor from the north east corner of
the Olympic Park to the Olympic Stadium in south-west, as well as
a view out towards central London, to St Paul's Cathedral and the
Swiss Re tower ('the Gherkin')
Progress images of the substation construction, August 2008:

Construction photographs from Olympic Delivery Authority
Image of the substation proposal by NORD architects, Glasgow

Substation image from Olympic Delivery Authority
|
London Olympics Buildings
The Olympic Park Energy Centre

London Energy Centre image from Olympic Delivery Authority
London Architect
London Olympic Pumping Station
London Olympic Aquatics Centre
London Olympic Stadium
London Buildings

World Architecture : e-architect
- key buildings across the globe
Comments / photos for the Olympic Park Substation page welcome:
info@e-architect.co.uk
London Olympics Substation - page : adrian
welch / isabelle lomholt |
|
|
|