In 1948 London hosted the Olympics but athletes were asked to bring their own towels. In 2012, the country is investing £9bn to build the largest new urban park in Europe for over 150 years. Will it transform east London, create new jobs and housing, and increase interest in sport and culture? Will we be finishing last or will the Olympics encourage us to raise our game for other ambitious projects?
Speakers include:
Bob Allies, Allies & Morrison, designers of the Olympic media centre
Stephen Bayley, architecture and design correspondent for the Observer, author of Labour Camp: Failure of Style Over Substance
Ricky Burdett, Centennial Professor of Architecture and Urbanism, LSE and advisor to the Olympic Park Legacy Company
Tony Hall, director of Cultural Olympiad and chief executive of the Royal Opera House
Alison Nimmo, Director of Design and Regeneration, Olympic Development Authority
This event is one of five Future City debates which bring together leading forecasters, historians and practitioners, to look at the challenges that London faces and debate possible solutions. The debates will draw on the capital as a site of ideas and innovation in the past and present, and bring together competing visions of the future.
Special guest speakers include Billy Bragg, Ricky Burdett, Sir Terry Farrell, Tony Hall, Adam Hart-Davis, Hermann Hauser, Luke Johnson and James Woudhuysen.
The debates take place every week night from Monday 4 to Friday 8 October at the British Library:
Monday: Bankers and Bonuses: What has the City ever done for London?
Tuesday: Is London growing too big too fast?
Wednesday: London and the Olympics: Predicting the legacy of the twenty-first century
Thursday: Is London missing out on the potential of new technologies?
Friday: London and the future: Will we still be a major player in the world in 2050?
To book go to www.bl.uk/storyoflondon
The Future City debates are part of the Mayor's Story of London festival.
Explore the Story of London and its tale of innovation. From 1–10 October the Story of London festival will see London’s past unravel to reveal the future.
Everyone has a part to play in this epic tale. You can work with artists as they create new work about London or listen to experts exploring the legacy of Hendrix and the birth of the light bulb. Learn about the city’s rich brewing history or investigate London’s secret gardens. Alternatively, why not create a film about the city, record the sounds of the streets or map the London of tomorrow? It's a festival as diverse as the capital itself, celebrating London and Londoners from every part of the city; past, present and future. Come and take part or join the debate.
To join in visit www.london.gov.uk/storyoflondon
Added by nico_macdonald on September 16, 2010