TableDancer
Well-Known Member
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I am a Greenwich resident and have been to a number of the meetings and have kept involved as much as possible. I have very little time for Andrew Gilligan and his self serving scare mongering. I also am disappointed that there wont be an equestrian legacy but we are where we are and I am delighted that I will able to be part of such an amazing experience.
Many residents are very excited to be part of hosting such a fantastic event and do understand that some areas of the park may be closed from time to time but ultimately it won't have a massive impact. I actually use the park every day to walk my dogs so I will be in a first hand position to see what's going on.
The residents are used to big disruptive events such as the London Marathon which has some 36,000 people stomping all over the park and running along its roads. Blackheath fireworks attracts 100,000 people to the heath. The heath regularly hosts circuses and fairs which use large lorries and host crowd parking, in fact as I look out of my window I can see one set up today.
The legacy for Greenwich isnt horse related but it is great for the residents, http://www.greenwich.gov.uk/Greenwich/2012Games/OlympicNews/OlympicCountdownCelebrations.htm
I particularly like one locals view that the Olympics are an opportunity, not a threat, and that it is not Our Park: it belongs to the nation, and had been lent to us. The least we can do is to lend it to the world for a short while for such a momentous event even if it involves a bit of inconvenience.
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That's a really useful insight, pootler, thanks! I for one find it difficult to follow the ins and outs and pros and cons as the debate seems to be so polarised, with positions entrenched on either side. I agree with christinao that you can't believe all you read in the press, but her stance could hardly be seen as neutral so I'm not going to be persuaded by her either! I think it's a shame that it is likely to be rather cramped (bit like HK looked), and that there will be no legacy. My preference tends towards Windsor where, as others have said, we are halfway there and the backdrop would still be awesome and thoroughly British. I don't see the XC going as an insurmountable problem: great strides have been made in ground management in recent years and it is possible to produce decent going on pretty much any ground, given a bit of time and plenty of money. In fact I ran there the second last year it ran, when it was sponsored by Emirates Airlines so the budget was pretty good: it came up very dry but they treated the ground tirelessly with machinery and watering and it rode great - there were no ground-related withdrawals in a high class field. Many of the problmes previously were due to a tight budget (2* events are notoriously difficult to finance) and the intransigence of park officials - neither of which should be such a problem for an Olympics!
But notwithstanding my personal preference, it's good to hear such reassuring comments from someone with a bit of an axe to grind so thanks again pootler
I am a Greenwich resident and have been to a number of the meetings and have kept involved as much as possible. I have very little time for Andrew Gilligan and his self serving scare mongering. I also am disappointed that there wont be an equestrian legacy but we are where we are and I am delighted that I will able to be part of such an amazing experience.
Many residents are very excited to be part of hosting such a fantastic event and do understand that some areas of the park may be closed from time to time but ultimately it won't have a massive impact. I actually use the park every day to walk my dogs so I will be in a first hand position to see what's going on.
The residents are used to big disruptive events such as the London Marathon which has some 36,000 people stomping all over the park and running along its roads. Blackheath fireworks attracts 100,000 people to the heath. The heath regularly hosts circuses and fairs which use large lorries and host crowd parking, in fact as I look out of my window I can see one set up today.
The legacy for Greenwich isnt horse related but it is great for the residents, http://www.greenwich.gov.uk/Greenwich/2012Games/OlympicNews/OlympicCountdownCelebrations.htm
I particularly like one locals view that the Olympics are an opportunity, not a threat, and that it is not Our Park: it belongs to the nation, and had been lent to us. The least we can do is to lend it to the world for a short while for such a momentous event even if it involves a bit of inconvenience.
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That's a really useful insight, pootler, thanks! I for one find it difficult to follow the ins and outs and pros and cons as the debate seems to be so polarised, with positions entrenched on either side. I agree with christinao that you can't believe all you read in the press, but her stance could hardly be seen as neutral so I'm not going to be persuaded by her either! I think it's a shame that it is likely to be rather cramped (bit like HK looked), and that there will be no legacy. My preference tends towards Windsor where, as others have said, we are halfway there and the backdrop would still be awesome and thoroughly British. I don't see the XC going as an insurmountable problem: great strides have been made in ground management in recent years and it is possible to produce decent going on pretty much any ground, given a bit of time and plenty of money. In fact I ran there the second last year it ran, when it was sponsored by Emirates Airlines so the budget was pretty good: it came up very dry but they treated the ground tirelessly with machinery and watering and it rode great - there were no ground-related withdrawals in a high class field. Many of the problmes previously were due to a tight budget (2* events are notoriously difficult to finance) and the intransigence of park officials - neither of which should be such a problem for an Olympics!
But notwithstanding my personal preference, it's good to hear such reassuring comments from someone with a bit of an axe to grind so thanks again pootler