London Olympics 2012 & Queen's Diamond Jubilee
While it my seem incongruent to an architectural tale, the British events of 2012; The London Olympics, and The Diamond Jubilee of Queen Elizabeth II, were seminal to my view of myself and the reality of ambitions. In Abingdon, on royal occasions thousands of bread buns are thrown from the County Hall to the crowded townsfolk in the Market Square below. Abingdon is said to be the oldest continuously inhabited place in Britain, and the traditional morris dancers of the town are one of a handful remaining with a continuous tradition stretching from antiquity. 2012 was to be a royal year, and I began it by joining the dancers, so I could join in the Diamond Jubilee celebrations, including the bun throwing.
The day of the Jubilee came in the wettest of English summers. Rain like stair-rods had us soaked to the skin in our shirt sleeves, as the town gazed on beneath their umbrellas. I had followed my ambition and joined in, the proof being a large photo of us in the Abingdon Museum, a photo of which is shown here.
I had dismissed any notion of attending The Olympics, which were to be staged in London later in the year. A corporate spectacle, a political exercise, a corruption racket, I thought. My elderly friend Isabel asked me to walk her to see The Olympic Flame, as it passed through the town early one morning. It lit something in me. The Absolutely Fabulous Olympic Special TV show aired that evening. Watching it with Isabel, when Patsy and Eddie opened the door to the stadium, and I heard on the TV the loud noise of silence in the arena, I knew I had to go.
I didn’t have very much money, and the ticket lottery had already finished. As the stadium preparations were finishing off, a few seats with restricted view were being released daily in tiny bursts, and some of those tickets were on sale for £20.12. From 9 to 5 daily I sat at my computer, pressing F5 to refresh the ticket webpage. I mastered the 6 number Captcha; one look to remember and type the code, then through the maze of possible tickets to the one I wanted, The Opening Ceremony. Like Charlie in Willy Wonka, after days and days, my moment came, a golden ticket, the payment screen, confirmation, I WAS GOING!!
I reasoned that because I would be back late to Oxford, and I couldn’t afford a taxi, I would use The Oxford Tube coach, and take the bicycle I designed and had made for me when I was at school. First to Oxford to ring my bicycle bell along with the bells of the city ringing out at Opening Ceremony Director Danny Boyle’s invitation, then to London; Marble Arch to Stratford for my ticket, then to Tower Bridge to see the flame arriving on Gloriana. Back to Stratford for The Ceremony, then to Marble Arch and to coach to Oxford, cycling in the dim light of the dawn back to Abingdon. 60 miles.
We had studied the development of The Olympic Park at university; it was very informative to see the lightest stadium ever built at first hand.
The restricted view seat, was restricted only by the extraordinary model Glastonbury Tor and the Heart of Oak tree. The buzzing atmosphere was heighted by a charge in the air of the threat of thunder. The Red Arrows passed where I couldn’t see them, and the wait was for hours.
The largest sound system ever assembled thundered itself into life, Evelyn Glennie fired out the opening shots of the evening from her snare drum, and Bradley Wiggins rang the largest tuned bell ever cast.
The flame was so fierce when it lit, I could feel the heat through my binoculars. When the crowd had cleared the stadium, the thousands of volunteers, many of whom had dustbin-drums, danced and whooped around the cauldron like some ancient tribe, for hours into the night.
I was hooked, I watched every minute of the sport, waving my flag for the blizzard of Team GB medals, and then I was back. Another effort at the computer, another cheap ticket, this time for the Closing Ceremony!
As Darcy Bussell danced down on her flying-wire, and the flame spread-out and died, I knew that anything was possible if I had faith and perseverance, I could make things happen. Nothing was impossible.
My mum was sorry to have missed The Olympics, so I took her to The Olympic Park during the Paralympics a few weeks later.
From The Stadium, we took the DLR to Greenwich to see the Dressage finals. We sang The National Anthem 3 times.
The Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park, as it is now known, is a truly extraordinary legacy for the nation. While we were promised an inheritance of green space, sporting facilities, and a new residential district for London, the press at the time were full of examples of dusty and abandoned facilities in Barcelona and Athens, unused remnants of their Olympic projects. London, however is a success in my view – the park is beautiful, the stadium is amazing. Somehow the flame still seems to burn; in the water, the soil, and the wildflowers.