Tag Archive | "athletes"

False Creek and the Vancouver Olympic Village.


“The false creek area will be at the heart and centre of the 2010 Winter Games in Vancouver.”

Historical tour of False Creek

During World War I, the easternmost part of False Creek, which formerly ran to Clark Drive, was filled in by the Great Northern Railway and Canadian Northern Pacific Railway to create new land for their yards and terminals. Talk of draining and filling the inlet to Granville Street continued into the 1950s, but that never occurred.
The False Creek area was the industrial heartland of Vancouver through to the 1950s. It was home to many sawmills and small port operations, as well as the western terminus of the major Canadian railways. As industry shifted to other areas, the vicinity around False Creek started to deteriorate.

The future of False Creek south was subsequently shaped by debates on freeways, urban renewal, and the rise of citizen participation in urban planning.

Through the 60s, the ruling NPA city government and senior city bureaucrats had hatched a plan – with little or no public consultation – to run freeways through the city. In the same period, the City razed large portions of Strathcona under the aegis of urban renewal. A group of influential citizens formed The Electors Action Movement (TEAM) to oppose the freeway and to radically change the way decisions were made on land use. A key figure amongst these people was Walter Hardwick, a Geography professor at UBC who envisioned the retrofit of this brownfield industrial site into a vibrant waterfront mixed-use community.

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First elected to City Council in 1968, Dr. Hardwick led the City’s redevelopment team and helped secure the participation of the Federal Government which owned Granville Island. A major public involvement and co-design process followed which established public priorities for an accessible waterfront seawall; mixed-tenure housing including market condominiums, co-op and low-income housing and live-aboard marinas; and a vibrant waterfront market. These plans were formalized in a 1972 Official Development Plan. The form and mix of development were revolutionary for Vancouver at the time. A third of the site was set aside for housing at 40 units/acre with the balance converted to park, waterfront and commnuity uses.

The North Shore of False Creek was further transformed in the 1980s, as it took centre stage during Expo 86. Following Expo, the Province sold the NFC site to Li Ka-shing who brought ideas of a higher density waterfront community to the downtown peninsula. Vancouver’s experience with South False Creek and the public participation that shaped it was key to developing NFC as a livable high-density community. For example, Ka-shing’s company wanted to develop “islands” of market condo’s on the waterfront but was soundly rebuffed by the public and by planners who favoured the extension of a 100% publicly accessible waterfront and seawall. The 1991 Official Development Plan enabled significant new density commensurate with the provision of significant public amenities including streetfront shops and services, parks, school sites, community centres, daycares, co-op and low-income housing. Since then, most of the north shore has become a new neighbourhood of dense housing (about 100 units/acre), adding some 50,000 new residents to Vancouver’s downtown peninsula.

On December 1, 1998, Vancouver City Council adopted a set of Blueways policies and guidelines stating the vision of a waterfront city where land and water combine to meet the environmental, cultural and economic needs of the City and its people in a sustainable, equitable, high quality manner.

South East False Creek has been developed and will serve as the athletes’ village for the 2010 Winter Olympics. Fully built out, South Ease False Creek it will eventually become a residential area for 16,000 people.

(above information from Wikipedia..)

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Posted in Culture, Featured, Vancouver 2010, Venues, VideosComments (1)

Blogging, Athletes and web sites – to be continued …


So, as Boris pointed out, the IOC has told athletes not to particpate in journalistic activities, which to them, means blogging.  This is good and bad. Bad cause i want to read the personal notes of the athletes rather than the contrived emotion and occasionally inane interviews.  In some ways this ban is GOOD because it shows that the whole citizen as journalist/artist/communicator trip is on the radar of the “grey suits” who run the IOC (and of course control the world ;-) ).

This is lame because many athletes use blogging as a means to stay in touch with family, friends and supporters.

A few examples of web stuff i’ve come across:

Kari Traa - the (uhh sorta hot) Norwegian mogul skiier keeps a “gossip” section on her site which she blogs about “controversial” content like where she is sleeping at the village (big screenshot on Flickr).  However, the IOC has decided that her actions are verbotten (big screenshot on Flickr).

Kari Traa - No blogging allowed

Why is this?  In thinking it over, the IOC feels that athletes blogging either a) infringes on someone’s rights; or, b) has potential to be imflammatory or otherwise contrary to the Olympic ideals, or c), am i missing something.

Torino Conversations – With athlete’s blogging is not allowed, corporate sponsor (err sorry, … Olympic “family”) blogging is allowed as demonstrated by a certain sugar-laden, artificially-colored beverage company’s attempt at promoting citizen journalism.  It comes across as amateurish, not amateurish like, “ahh these kids are making it themselves” but amateurish like an ad exec said, “hey billy, you like that Internet, go make find kids and do some of that bloggin stuff my kids talk about”  While the kids who are getting the trips are stoked, and the result is just lacking in any sort of insight or cutting-edgeiness.

Off the Podium is IOC’s official site seems to be geared towards USA disenchanted youth apparently.  They spent a lot of money on this Flash-o-mania site with moving shit and popping up console windows.  Mostly bios on athletes and explaining why said athletes are “cool.”  Seems like there is some good content here, just so buried in the endless container (egads, frames) that it isn’t worth the brain-strain.

TV coverage is starting back up so this is all you get for now.  Enjoy!

More later on Begg-Smith spam-antic, more websites, and hockey blather, and oh yea, i haven’t forgot about the SLC Flashback series but i am still putzing away at it – thanks for caring.

Posted in Torino 2006Comments (0)


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