Here are the main venues for the 2012 London Games, which mark 100 days to go on April 18. The sites will be centred around the Olympic Park at Stratford in east London. Outside London, the football competition will be held around Britain at Cardiff, Coventry, Glasgow, Manchester and Newcastle. Slalom canoeing will take place north of the capital, with rowing and sprint canoeing to the west and mountain biking to the east. The sailing events take place at Weymouth on the southern English coast.
OLYMPIC PARK VENUES, STADIUM
Capacity: 80,000, Sport: Athletics (and will host opening and closing ceremonies), Venue: New, permanent, Location: Olympic Park
n Unlike Beijing’s Bird’s Nest, the showpiece stadium, costing £486 million ($790 million, 550 million euros), has a simpler design, drawn up with a view to scaling it down after the Games. The steel and concrete upper tier can be dismantled, leaving a 25,000-seater sunken bowl. Construction was completed under budget in March 2011. East London football club West Ham is one of four bidders for the lease once the Games are over.
AQUATICS CENTRE
Capacity: 17,500, Sports: Diving, Swimming, Synchronised Swimming, Modern Pentathlon, Venue: New, permanent, Location: Olympic Park
n Designed by the architect Zaha Hadid, the £269 million centre has a 160-metre-long (525-foot-long) long wave-like roof. It contains a 50-metre competition pool, a diving pool, and a warm-up pool. One of the few Olympic-sized pools in Britain, it will be scaled back to 2,500 seats after the Games. Has already held the 2012 Diving World Cup and the British Swimming Championships, where Paralympian Ellie Simmonds set the venue’s first world record.
RIVERBANK ARENA
Capacity: 15,000, Sport: Hockey, Venue: New, temporary, Location: Olympic Park
n The arena will hold 15,000 fans and has a warm-up pitch behind it. The blue and pink pitches have been laid, with the seating to be complete before a test event in May. After the Games, the hockey centre will move to a 3,000-seater facility north of the park that can be extended to 15,000 for major events.
BASKETBALL ARENA
Capacity: 12,000, Sports: Basketball, Handball, Venue: New, temporary, Location: Olympic Park
n The fourth-largest venue on the park and one of the largest-ever temporary venues built for any Games. Construction completed within the £43 million budget in June 2011. The frame of 20 steel arches has been wrapped in fabric to form the canvas for an innovative lighting display. After the Olympics, parts of it are expected to be reused or relocated elsewhere in Britain.
COPPER BOX
Capacity: 6,500, Sports: Handball, Modern Pentathlon (fencing), Venue: New, permanent, Location: Olympic Park
n The distinctive, £43 million copper-clad arena will host the early handball rounds. The copper will develop a rich colour as it ages. Completed in May 2011. After the Games, it will be converted into a multi-purpose indoor sports centre for community use. It has retractable seating.
VELODROME
Capacity: 6,000, Sports: Track Cycling, Venue: New, permanent, Location: Olympic Park
n The lower tier has 3,500 seats, with the rest suspended in two upper tiers under the curved roof. In between, a glass wall will allow people to watch the action from outside. Costing £93 million, it was completed in February 2011 and held a leg of the Track Cycling World Cup in February this year. Australia’s Anna Meares and Kaarle McCulloch set the first world record at the Velodrome on February 17 in the team sprint. It was nominated for the 2011 Stirling Prize, Britain’s most prestigious architecture award.
WATER POLO ARENA
Capacity: 5,000, Sport: Water Polo, Venue: New, temporary, Location: Olympic Park
n Construction was completed in April. The wedge-shaped venue is covered in a silver-coloured wrap and its sloping roof made from air-inflated plastic cushions. It features a warm-up pool inside. The arena will be taken down after the Games and parts of it are expected to be reused within Britain.
OTHER KEY VENUES
Capacity: 30,000, Sport: Tennis, Venue: Existing,
permanent, Location: Southwest London
n The home of the Wimbledon championships will host the entire tennis tournament. Centre Court, dating back to 1922, has a 15,000-seater capacity and a retractable roof, enabling play during rain or bad light. Court One can host 11,500 spectators.
NORTH GREENWICH ARENA
Capacity: 20,000, Sports: Gymnastics (Artistic, Trampoline), Basketball finals, Venue: Existing, permanent, Location: Southeast London
n Once known as the Millennium Dome, this arena cost £789 million to build but lay idle for years after the Millennium Experience exhibition in 2000. Eventually taken into private hands, it was transformed into a highly successful sports and entertainment arena with shops, restaurants a nightclub and a cinema.