Rachel Mawhood
Well-Known Member
What do you think has gone wrong here?
LOCOG has, it says, sold 50,000 tickets to the 2012 Olympics cross-country day at Greenwich
Source: Section 2 of LOCOG's Transport Plan in its current application (11/2604/SD) to the London Borough of Greenwich.
But the - independently assessed - maximum safe capacity of Greenwich Park is 15,000
(Source: Royal Parks 2010 Guidelines for Event Organisers)
or, to be accurate, less than 15,000 because so much space is to be taken up by the stadium, stabling, broadcast compounds, x-country course, loos, etc. This information about Greenwich Park has been readily available to event organisers for some years.
Normally there are 9-10 gates through which to evacuate people, if need be. LOCOG's current plans include a 4m-5m high security fence (electrified at the top, if it is like the fence at the Olympic Park, because during the Olympics all crowded places are prime terrorist targets) with essentially only three exits.
At the Licensing Committee of 19 October 2011 (LOCOG applied to Greenwich Council for a premises licence) LOCOG representatives were asked to clarify what the maximum safe capacity of the Park is. LOCOG's venue manager, Jeremy Edwards, remained silent. Sitting next to Jeremy Edwards was LOCOG's solicitor, Mr Phipps, who told the Licensing Committee to "Ask the Fire Brigade". Normally, venue organisers don't evade questions about the safe capacity of their venue.
So I submitted a Freedom of Information request to the London Fire Brigade, and that is how I know that the maximum safe capacity of Greenwich Park is only 15,000 or (if those attending are doing something sedentary such as watching films, with no alcohol, no dancing, no horses) 20,000. Not 68,000. Not 50,000.
PS Some people, including journalists, have assumed that all the 35,000 or so London Marathon runners assemble in Greenwich Park before the start of the Marathon, and therefore the Park capacity must be at least 35,000. But long ago the London Marathon got too big for that: only the "red start" is in Greenwich Park; the "blue start" and wheelchair participants' start are on Blackheath.
LOCOG has, it says, sold 50,000 tickets to the 2012 Olympics cross-country day at Greenwich
Source: Section 2 of LOCOG's Transport Plan in its current application (11/2604/SD) to the London Borough of Greenwich.
But the - independently assessed - maximum safe capacity of Greenwich Park is 15,000
(Source: Royal Parks 2010 Guidelines for Event Organisers)
or, to be accurate, less than 15,000 because so much space is to be taken up by the stadium, stabling, broadcast compounds, x-country course, loos, etc. This information about Greenwich Park has been readily available to event organisers for some years.
Normally there are 9-10 gates through which to evacuate people, if need be. LOCOG's current plans include a 4m-5m high security fence (electrified at the top, if it is like the fence at the Olympic Park, because during the Olympics all crowded places are prime terrorist targets) with essentially only three exits.
At the Licensing Committee of 19 October 2011 (LOCOG applied to Greenwich Council for a premises licence) LOCOG representatives were asked to clarify what the maximum safe capacity of the Park is. LOCOG's venue manager, Jeremy Edwards, remained silent. Sitting next to Jeremy Edwards was LOCOG's solicitor, Mr Phipps, who told the Licensing Committee to "Ask the Fire Brigade". Normally, venue organisers don't evade questions about the safe capacity of their venue.
So I submitted a Freedom of Information request to the London Fire Brigade, and that is how I know that the maximum safe capacity of Greenwich Park is only 15,000 or (if those attending are doing something sedentary such as watching films, with no alcohol, no dancing, no horses) 20,000. Not 68,000. Not 50,000.
PS Some people, including journalists, have assumed that all the 35,000 or so London Marathon runners assemble in Greenwich Park before the start of the Marathon, and therefore the Park capacity must be at least 35,000. But long ago the London Marathon got too big for that: only the "red start" is in Greenwich Park; the "blue start" and wheelchair participants' start are on Blackheath.
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