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063


Additionally, certain areas are deliberately not lit. These include the Waterglades as well as two other green spaces, Victory Park and Mirabelle Gardens. Similarly, no feature lighting is provided to the water bodies within the site, instead these are left to act as mirrors, indirectly reflecting lighting from within the scheme. All of these areas feature well-lit perimeter routes, with visibility through the green spaces to the adjoining routes, promoting the idea of the public using these as a preference. As well as safety and security there are many other benefits of this strategy includ- ing reduced energy consumption, limiting impacts on bio-diversity - particularly in the wetland areas - and the preservation of natural beauty by avoiding a forest of light columns across the green spaces. Crucially, from a design perspective it is the context of darkness that allows for a simple, subtle and atmospheric solution in which the basic amenity lighting is designed


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to also create the required distinct charac- ter rather than imposing itself as a munici- pal layer.


ROUTES


The public realm to the Athletes Village is made up of three distinct route types, as well as additional feature lighting to the tree canopies, and to hard and soft landscape structures in certain areas. There are primary routes through the main public realm areas, secondary routes through the more residential areas and tertiary routes through the soft landscape. The lighting for


Opposite page Cross section of Ulysees Way (top) and Victory Parade (bottom).


This page (clockwise from top left) Waterways in the village were purposely left unlit, allowing them to reflect their surroundings; the lighting masterplan showing the different hierarchy of routes and the dark wetland areas; a layout of the village with proposed street names; lighting is carefully designed to avoid spill into adjacent living spaces.


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