Olympic urbanism: past, present and future

City planning and urban change have become closely associated with the Olympic Games. Early editions of the revived Games had relatively limited effects on their host cities but, over the past century, hosting the Olympic Games has become an urban project rather than merely a sporting or geopolitica...

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Main Authors: Smith, Andrew, Gold, John Robert, Gold, Margaret
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Informa UK Limited 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/9364/1/Olympic-urbanism-past-present-and-future.pdf
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author Smith, Andrew
Gold, John Robert
Gold, Margaret
author_facet Smith, Andrew
Gold, John Robert
Gold, Margaret
author_sort Smith, Andrew
collection LMU
description City planning and urban change have become closely associated with the Olympic Games. Early editions of the revived Games had relatively limited effects on their host cities but, over the past century, hosting the Olympic Games has become an urban project rather than merely a sporting or geopolitical one.Footnote1 This is demonstrated by the ways in which key terms such as ‘legacy’ and ‘spectacle’ are now commonly used. Rather than memories, behaviours or cultures nurtured by the Games, Olympic legacies now tend to be associated with physical changes made to host cities. Similarly, contemporary Olympic spectacle tends to be produced by dramatic architecture rather than unbridled festivity or sporting drama. Preparation for the Games is now less about spectator anticipation, athlete training and event organization, but rather a ‘build-up’ characterized by frenzied construction, planning disputes, cost overruns and the ill-treatment of labourers. Put simply, the Olympic Games have been urbanized. Host cities, and the changes made to those cities, are not merely background settings for the Olympic Games. Instead, the urban environment has moved to centre stage in that rather than merely staging the Games, organizers seem intent on staging the city – an idea explored by various authors including Hu (this volume). More recent shifts have also contributed to making the Olympic Games an essentially urban event. The Summer Games have always been associated with major cities, but the Winter Games have now also been urbanized, with large cities like Beijing, Salt Lake City, Turin and Vancouver hosting the Games since the Millennium. Moreover, new events have been introduced to represent urban sports in both the Winter and Summer Games. The programme for Paris 2024, for instance, includes breaking, BMX freestyle, skateboarding, and 3X3 basketball. These sports tend to be staged in streets, parks and plazas not formal arenas, thereby furthering the Games’ penetration into the city and the city into the Games.
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spelling oai:repository.londonmet.ac.uk:93642024-06-06T09:30:42Z http://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/9364/ Olympic urbanism: past, present and future Smith, Andrew Gold, John Robert Gold, Margaret 720 Architecture 790 Recreational & performing arts City planning and urban change have become closely associated with the Olympic Games. Early editions of the revived Games had relatively limited effects on their host cities but, over the past century, hosting the Olympic Games has become an urban project rather than merely a sporting or geopolitical one.Footnote1 This is demonstrated by the ways in which key terms such as ‘legacy’ and ‘spectacle’ are now commonly used. Rather than memories, behaviours or cultures nurtured by the Games, Olympic legacies now tend to be associated with physical changes made to host cities. Similarly, contemporary Olympic spectacle tends to be produced by dramatic architecture rather than unbridled festivity or sporting drama. Preparation for the Games is now less about spectator anticipation, athlete training and event organization, but rather a ‘build-up’ characterized by frenzied construction, planning disputes, cost overruns and the ill-treatment of labourers. Put simply, the Olympic Games have been urbanized. Host cities, and the changes made to those cities, are not merely background settings for the Olympic Games. Instead, the urban environment has moved to centre stage in that rather than merely staging the Games, organizers seem intent on staging the city – an idea explored by various authors including Hu (this volume). More recent shifts have also contributed to making the Olympic Games an essentially urban event. The Summer Games have always been associated with major cities, but the Winter Games have now also been urbanized, with large cities like Beijing, Salt Lake City, Turin and Vancouver hosting the Games since the Millennium. Moreover, new events have been introduced to represent urban sports in both the Winter and Summer Games. The programme for Paris 2024, for instance, includes breaking, BMX freestyle, skateboarding, and 3X3 basketball. These sports tend to be staged in streets, parks and plazas not formal arenas, thereby furthering the Games’ penetration into the city and the city into the Games. Informa UK Limited 2024-04-28 Article PeerReviewed text en cc_by_nc_nd_4 https://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/9364/1/Olympic-urbanism-past-present-and-future.pdf Smith, Andrew, Gold, John Robert and Gold, Margaret (2024) Olympic urbanism: past, present and future. Planning Perspectives, 39 (3). pp. 487-499. ISSN 1466-4518 https://doi.org/10.1080/02665433.2024.2344598 10.1080/02665433.2024.2344598
spellingShingle 720 Architecture
790 Recreational & performing arts
Smith, Andrew
Gold, John Robert
Gold, Margaret
Olympic urbanism: past, present and future
title Olympic urbanism: past, present and future
title_full Olympic urbanism: past, present and future
title_fullStr Olympic urbanism: past, present and future
title_full_unstemmed Olympic urbanism: past, present and future
title_short Olympic urbanism: past, present and future
title_sort olympic urbanism past present and future
topic 720 Architecture
790 Recreational & performing arts
url https://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/9364/1/Olympic-urbanism-past-present-and-future.pdf
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