Lee Valley White Water Centre

Lee Valley White Water Centre (previously known as Broxbourne White Water Canoe Centre) is a white-water slalom centre, that was constructed to host the canoe slalom events of the London 2012 Olympic Games. On 9 December 2010, Anne, Princess Royal officially opened the venue which is owned and managed by Lee Valley Regional Park Authority. The £31 million ($50 million US) project to construct the centre finished on schedule and was the first newly constructed Olympic venue to be completed.[1]

2012 Olympic Games, 31 July

Lee Valley White Water Centre
About
LocaleHertfordshire, England, United Kingdom
Coordinates51.6883°N 0.0156°W / 51.6883; -0.0156
Managing agentLee Valley Regional Park Authority
Main shapeTwo Loops
Water sourceGroundwater
PumpedOlympic: 5 pumps Training: 3 pumps
Practice poolYes
Lightingyes
Canoe liftyes
Opening date9 December 2010
Stats
Length300 m (980 ft)
Drop5.5 m (18 ft)
Flowrate13 m3/s (460 cu ft/s)
Lee Valley White Water Centre

The Olympic canoe slalom competition was held from 29 July through 2 August. The venue also hosted the 2015 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships.

Venue

Lee Valley White Water Centre map

The venue is located between the towns of Waltham Cross in Hertfordshire and Waltham Abbey in Essex. The site is just outside the northern boundary of Greater London and 9 miles (14 km) north-west of the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park in Stratford, east London. It is in the heart of River Lee Country Park which is part of the 10,000-acre (40 km2), 26-mile (42 km) long Lee Valley Park.[2] The venue opened in late 2010 offering canoeing and rafting activities to the public ahead of the London 2012 Summer Olympics.

The venue has a purpose-built slalom course for the Olympic white-water canoe events (flatwater canoeing and kayaking events took place at Dorney Lake, Buckinghamshire, west of London). The main competition channel is an international- and Olympic-standard 300-metre canoe and kayak slalom course. It and the shorter warm-up course empty into the warm-up and cool-down lake. The white water is created by a system of pumps which lift water into the two start pools. All of the water contained in the system is slightly chlorinated in order to retain water quality.[3] During the Games, temporary seating was installed around the venue for 12,000 spectators.

The 300-metre competition course has a drop of 5.5 metres[4] (18 ft), for an average slope of 1.8% (18 m/km or 95 ft/mile) and a pump-powered streamflow of 13 cubic metres per second (460 cubic feet per second).[5] The intermediate/warm-up course is 160 metres long with a drop of 1.6 metres and flow of 10.5 cubic metres per second.[4] A 10,000-square-metre lake, filled with groundwater, supplies the water for the pumps.[6] Lee Valley Regional Park Authority hope to bring in up to £45,000 per day from visitors to offset the energy cost of pumping the water.[7]

The course is sited within a new landscaped parkland setting, including path and bridge networks to enable spectators to have access and view the events (landscaping works were carried out by Tilbrooks Landscapes.[8]). A new facility building houses reception, café, changing rooms, shop, offices, spectator viewing, equipment storage and water pump and filtration facilities.[3]

Pre-Games use

Lee Valley White Water Centre was the only brand new London 2012 venue available for public use before the Games. On 8 September 2012 it became the first London 2012 venue to reopen to the public. The centre is intended to provide canoeing and rafting activities for users of all abilities who will be able to take advantage of the Olympic and intermediate course.[9] The venue is owned, funded and managed by Lee Valley Regional Park Authority; it will join the other London 2012 venues – the Velopark, Hockey Centre and Tennis centre at Eton Manor – that the Park Authority will also own, fund and manage in legacy.

Gate maps for 2012 Olympics

Preliminary Heats, 29, 30 July
Semi- & Final Races, 31 July 1, 2 August

Two gate sets were used for the Olympic Games, one for the first two days (left) and another for the last three days (right). Each gate set had six upstream gates (red numbers), but gate #12 of the first set was a flush gate with the second pole directly downstream of the first. Paddlers entered gate #12 from the left wall side and exited into the main current. Gate #18 of the second set was a downstream flush gate, with entrance from the flow and exit into the eddy. A 90-degree right turn direct from #18 to #19 was faster than the 270-degree eddy spin used by many contenders. All the gates were double-pole. There was no use of single-pole gates.[10][11]

Olympic Results.

Post-Games use

The venue opened again to the public after the Games as part of the Olympic Legacy Works. Spectator seating was removed and the venue returned to providing a leisure attraction for canoeing and white-water rafting and a competition venue for elite events, to be managed by Lee Valley Regional Park Authority.[3][9][12] In April 2011 it was confirmed that the centre would host the 2015 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships.[13] A£6.3 million redevelopment project was completed in February 2014 leading to the creation of new visitor facilities and new offices and training base for the GB Canoe Slalom team.

Design

Pavilion at Lee Valley White Water Centre

The main facility building is designed by FaulknerBrowns Architects.[14] The canoe course is located within a wider parkland setting designed by U.S.-based landscape architects Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates.[15][16] White-water course specialists Whitewater Parks International, working with civil and structural engineers Cundall, are the designers of the white-water courses.[17] Indigo Planning were the planning consultants and managed the preparation of the Environmental Statement. Stage D of the design process was completed by Morrison Construction[18] The Team of S2o Design and Engineering and Engineering Paddler Designs completed the detail design of the white-water channel itself.[19] The detail design of the white-water channel involved the creation of a 1:10 Froude scaled physical model that resulted in numerous changes to the initial white-water channel design. One of these changes was the conceptualization, design and implementation of the RapidBlocs Obstacle system. The RapidBlocs system allows course operators to reconfigure the placement of boulders, eddies, and rapids to meet design objectives. S2o and EPD were further responsible for course tuning and commissioning.[20]

Following nomination from Broxbourne Borough Council, Lee Valley White Water Centre won a special commendation at the 2011 Hertfordshire Building Futures Awards in recognition of the excellence of its design in meeting the needs of the sport, and the understated addition it makes to its parkland setting.

The centre has also won or been shortlisted for the following awards: 2012 winner of the Royal Institute of British Architects East Spirit of Ingenuity Award; 2012 winner of Secured by Design Award; 2011 Essex Tourism Awards (shortlisted) Best Large Attraction and Best Tourism Experience.

Transport

Road

The site is located just off the A121 road, with easy access from the A10 road, and junctions 25 and 26 of the M25 motorway.

Rail

Rail access to the site is via Cheshunt and Waltham Cross railway stations on the West Anglia Main Line, with frequent services from Stratford, near the main Olympic site, and Liverpool Street. Theobalds Grove railway station, on the Lea Valley Lines, is nearby.

Bus

Arriva Herts and Essex operates services 66,86,251 which pass close to the venue. Other bus routes run by Transport for London and Intalink stop at the nearby bus station in Waltham Cross town centre.[21]

Cycle and pedestrian

The Lee Navigation towpath forms part of the Lee Valley Walk and the National Cycle Route 1 is adjacent to the venue.

References

  1. Hertfordshire Mercury news item Archived 21 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 10 December 2010
  2. London2012.com venue page Archived 1 January 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  3. Planning green light for London 2012 Canoe / Kayak slalom venue Archived 4 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine London2012.com Press Release, 1 October 2008
  4. Construction underway on 2012 canoe slalom venue Archived 8 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine London2012.com Press Release, 3 July 2009
  5. http://www.leevalleypark.org.uk/en/content/cms/White_Water_Canoe_Ce/Centre_information/Centre_information.aspx Retrieved 28 August 2011.
  6. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 20 January 2010. Retrieved 2 February 2010.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) Retrieved 2 February 2010
  7. Beard, Matthew (24 May 2010). https://www.standard.co.uk/news/rapids-of-rockies-come-to-herts-for-2012-olympic-canoeists-6472660.html "Rapids of Rockies Come to Herts for 2012 Olympic Canoeists"]. London Evening Standard. Retrieved 4 August 2012.
  8. "Lee Valley WWC". Tilbrooks Landscapes. Archived from the original on 5 May 2013. Retrieved 1 March 2013.
  9. Lee Valley White Water Centre Information Page Retrieved 4 October 2010
  10. http://www.nbcolympics.com/video/canoe-kayak/heats-mens-c-1-k-1.html Accessed 2012-08-08
  11. http://www.nbcolympics.com/video/canoe-kayak/semifinal-final-mens-c-1.html Accessed 2012-08-08
  12. New Canoeing venue in Broxbourne confirmed for the London 2012 Olympic Games Archived 20 July 2008 at the Wayback Machine London2012.com Press Release, 16 April 2008
  13. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 20 March 2012. Retrieved 8 April 2012.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  14. "International events". Work > Sectors > Sport. FaulknerBrowns Architects. Retrieved 18 August 2011.
  15. London 2012: Press release Archived 24 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  16. Venue map Retrieved 14 October 2009
  17. London 2012: press release Archived 7 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  18. Staff (11 June 2010). "Construction of Olympic White Water Venue on Schedule". BBC Essex. Retrieved 4 August 2012.
  19. http://www.canoeicf.com/icf/NewsGallery/News-Archive/March-2012/Profile-of-the-week-Scott-Shipley.html
  20. Sources: Institute of Civil Engineers, ICE Proceedings volume 165 Issue CE 1 February 2012
  21. Timetable Archived 4 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 27 July 2012

Full video of Olympic competition

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