PANSTADIA & ARENA MANAGEMENT AUTUMN 2013
A CARNIVAL OF SPORT
The Rio venues will come alive at dusk.
Rio’s Olympic venues will provide a lasting sporting legacy amidst a new urban environment, explains Alf Oschatz, EMEA Sector Leader for Sports at AECOM.
I
n 2011, AECOM won Brazil’s fi rst international architecture competition to design the masterplan for Rio’s 2016 Olympic Park, making it the fi rst company to design the parks for two consecutive Olympic and Paralympic Games.
In Rio, AECOM has taken on an even larger role than it had on the London 2012 Games. For 2016 it has responsibility for the preliminary design of the seven sporting venues as well as the detailed design of the International Broadcast Centre. This is in addition to the architectural, masterplanning, landscaping, engineering, cost consultancy, project management, sustainability and transportation strategy design services that it also provided in London.
Set in one of the most beautiful areas on Earth, AECOM’s masterplan takes its inspiration from the dramatic natural setting of Rio. Located on a former Formula 1 race track in Barra da Tijuca, the main Olympic park sits on a triangular space with water on either side. During Games time, at the southern peninsula of the site there will be an entertainment area for around 12,000 people to watch the events on big screens.
The park’s design draws from the Atlantica Forest that surrounds Rio
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de Janeiro. This context provides the conceptual inspiration and infl uences the architecture and landscape design as will the Brazilian culture and strong design heritage. The masterplan sets out to respect and reinforce the balance between native ecology, the city and its people while delivering the platform for sporting excellence.
Every Olympics needs to refl ect the character and ambitions of the host city and this is where the differences between the two parks are most pronounced. While London was about demonstrating how a short global event can lead to the long-term regeneration of one of the most neglected and deprived areas of the city, Rio is about celebrating Brazil’s emergence as a world power as well as making sure there is a strong legacy plan in place.
Throughout the development of the Rio masterplan, you can see how AECOM has been applying the lessons learnt from working on London 2012. This includes working with the wide range of stakeholders and local communities, and the utilisation of our knowledge of the requirements for running such a huge event, from crowd management and traffi c strategies to meeting the needs of athletes, and visitors and the
extended Olympic management and support system.
The vision for the future is not just to create a global stage for the Olympic and Paralympic Games of 2016, but also, in the longer term, to create a new legacy district with new homes, jobs and places for leisure activities with a new central park and a thriving beautiful waterfront. It is also set to become a global centre of sporting excellence, with a Legacy Olympic Training Centre utilising the Games’ permanent sporting venues.
After the Games, the site will evolve into a compact urban environment built around a network of streets and open spaces, which encourages a diverse mix of living, working and recreational uses. AECOM has taken reference from the grid, linearity, axis and contrasting organic forms which permeate Rio’s unique urban environment to propose a responsive fl exible framework that resonates with and echoes the specifi c local characteristics of Barra and Rio. The masterplan provides an opportunity to enhance environmental quality and bring the original concept of architect and urban planner Lúcio Costa into the 21st century as an example of new urbanism for a new era.
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