Case study:London Olympics Parklands: Difference between revisions

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|Works completed=2012/01/01
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|Funding sources=Olympic Delivery Authority, Defra, Natural England,
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Revision as of 14:07, 4 March 2013

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Location: 51° 32' 49.21" N, 0° 1' 2.57" W
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Project overview

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Status Complete
Project web site
Themes Spatial planning
Country England
Main contact forename Mike
Main contact surname Vaughan
Main contact user ID
Contact organisation Atkins, Olympic Development Authority
Contact organisation web site http://http://www.landscapeinstitute.org/knowledge/olympics.php
Partner organisations Atkins, Olympic Development Authority, Environment Agency, Natural England
Parent multi-site project
This is a parent project
encompassing the following
projects
No
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Project summary

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The Olympic Park will bring lasting benefits to east London. After the Games, it will be transformed to include a huge urban park. The new park will link the tidal Thames Estuary to the south and the Hertfordshire countryside to the north.

Some of the major benefits to the environment include:

  • 8kms of river restored
  • 4,000 homes protected from flood
  • 2 million tonnes soil decontaminated
  • The largest urban park created in Europe for over 100 years

Native species planted, including oak, ash, willow, birch, hazel, holly, blackthorn and hawthorn – a home for wildlife in the middle of the city. 30,000 tonnes of silt removed from waterways. 280 hectares of brownfield land cleaned.

750 bat roost and bird boxes put on site.

45 hectares of wildlife habitat created.

20 million gallons of contaminated groundwater treated.

4000 homes in West Ham and Canning Town have reduced flood risk.

99.5 per cent of construction waste re-used, recycled or recovered.

98 per cent of material from demolition work re-used, recycled or recovered.

Monitoring surveys and results

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Lessons learnt

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Catchment and subcatchment

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Site

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Name Olympic Parkland
WFD water body codes
WFD (national) typology
WFD water body name River Lea
Pre-project morphology
Reference morphology
Desired post project morphology
Heavily modified water body No
National/international site designation
Local/regional site designations
Protected species present No
Invasive species present Yes
Species of interest
Dominant hydrology
Dominant substrate
River corridor land use Urban
Average bankfull channel width category
Average bankfull channel width (m)
Average bankfull channel depth category
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Mean discharge category
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Average channel gradient category
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Average unit stream power (W/m2)


Project background

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Reach length directly affected (m)
Project started 2005/01/01
Works started 2005/01/01
Works completed 2012/01/01
Project completed 2012/01/01
Total cost category
Total cost (k€)
Benefit to cost ratio
Funding sources Olympic Delivery Authority, Defra, Natural England

Cost for project phases

Phase cost category cost exact (k€) Lead organisation Contact forename Contact surname
Investigation and design
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Works and works supervision
Post-project management and maintenance
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Reasons for river restoration

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Mitigation of a pressure
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Measures

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Structural measures
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Planform / Channel pattern
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Monitoring

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quality elements
Element When monitored Type of monitoring Control site used Result
Before measures After measures Qualitative Quantitative

Biological quality elements

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quality elements
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Physico-chemical quality elements

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quality elements
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Any other monitoring, e.g. social, economic

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Monitoring documents

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Additional documents and videos

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Olympic Parklands Green Infrastructure ODA document

Talk by Mike Vaughan of Atkins on the river works


Additional links and references

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Link Description

Supplementary Information

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