[Editor’s Note: This is the second part of a multi-part series by Brent Toderian who will be sharing his direct observations on the challenges and legacies before and after the 2010 Olympics as well as his thoughts on the other host cities, including London. If you missed the first part, you can read it here.]
An interesting way to follow the last post is to remember how we in Vancouver were feeling around this time in the lead-up toward the 2010 Games. I wonder how it might compare with the London organizer’s feelings and thinking at this stage. It’s actually very easy to remember back to 2010, thanks to a timely interview I did weeks before the event with Nate Berg — then with Places and now with Atlantic Cities — that ran on February 8th, 2010, just prior to the February 12th Opening Ceremonies.
Here is some of that Interview, to set the stage for later observations:
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Nate Berg: Your city is just about to host the Olympics. What’s the mood like there?
Brent Toderian: There’s a feeling of the calm before the storm, but saying there’s calm here is probably not particularly accurate. There’s still a huge amount to do, but the truth is, when you’ve spent years working to get to this moment, if you’re not ready by now, you probably won’t be. So there are finishing touches to be done, but we’re ready and the mood is ramping up. People are really enthusiastic about hosting the world.
Past Olympic cities have talked about the emotional roller coaster that happens before an Olympics, and sometimes you have to go through the troughs to get to the high points. I think our city has had that. But as we get closer and closer to the day, it’s just more excitement and less worry. As they say, at this point it’s like a luge sled: limited steering, and no brakes.
NB: Tell me about earlier on in the process when you actually did have that steering. What was it like to prepare for these games years before the event?
BT: Certainly the city planner’s role starts very early, because it’s about putting the planning in place long before you even start construction. I’ve been here about three and a half years — I came in when we were having to essentially reinvent our design negotiation processes to design the Olympic Village and other Olympic venues. As you can imagine, if we were thinking about the design now we’d be in big trouble. Those steps got done years ago, and it’s been fascinating to watch the construction happen within such an expedited time frame, particularly in the Athletes Village, because it’s rare to see a community of that scale practically leap from the ground in short order. It usually takes something like an Olympics to have it happen in such a choreographed way, like a conductor making music.
The week I arrived, there was controversy in the newspapers about the competing visions for the architecture of the Olympic Village. Robert Stern had visited the city as a possible architect for the site and had made some comments about the Vancouver model of city building. The vision of a quaint fishing village had been floated in the media, and suddenly the debate was on. From the city’s perspective, we had envisioned a world-class sustainable community for the False Creek area long before the Olympics were ever a gleam in our eyes. It was intended to be the greenest community in North America. So the city’s vision was for a contemporary, West Coast, highly sustainable community with architecture that is of its time and not seeking to replicate a marketing theme. Ultimately, Robert Stern wasn’t selected for the project.
Many local architects became highly engaged, including Canada’s most famous architect, the recently departed Arthur Erickson, who with his partner Nick Milkovich did a number of the signature buildings with Walter Francl, who’s also one of our best local architects. Relatively quickly, we had an architecture and an urbanism that is very much Vancouver, not star-chitecture – and a great opportunity to showcase the Vancouver model of city-building, with a strong partnership between city planners and private sector local designers, architects and developers to create something that would blow the world away. And I think that’s what we’ve managed to achieve in the Athletes Village. But as you can imagine, going through that process and having those debates is never easy.
NB: From an urban planning perspective, what impact do you think the games will have on the city?
BT: We’re going to have significant physical legacies of the Olympics, not the least of which is the Athletes Village. And on top of that we have our new Canada Line subway that connects the airport to downtown, and a number of athletic facilities, either new or upgraded, that will be sport or civic legacies for the city afterward. But there’s also physical infrastructure and what we call “look-of-the-city” legacies that will make Vancouver more livable and vibrant. We’ve spent over 6 million dollars on public art pieces scattered across the city, integrated into the urban realm, that will make the city more attractive long after the Olympics are over.
So from a physical city-builder’s perspective, the legacies will be powerful. From a policy-maker’s perspective, we have a legacy of new attitudes and standards and policies that have fundamentally changed business-a-usual for Vancouver. Almost everything we learned in the development of Athletes Village has been translated into new approaches in our citywide zoning, citywide policies and guidelines, or just new attitudes.
When you’re doing a place like Athletes Village, and you very much want it to be a model, my perspective is: What good is a model of it doesn’t change business-as-usual, if it doesn’t make everything that comes after it better? So in our case, even before the Athletes Village was completed, it was substantially influencing the city, and indeed the regional discussion on city building.
Many of the “green” zoning exemptions we built into the development approvals have now been built into our city-wide zoning bylaw — even before the Olympic buildings were open. Our learning’s on passive design have been translated into a passive design toolkit. Our urban agriculture learning’s have been translated into urban agriculture guidelines for the city. Our learning’s about district energy — we did our first neighborhood energy utility using sewer heat recovery to heat the Athletes Village and much larger area — have already raised our district energy bar with all other major projects across the city. We’ve emphasized that these new projects have to be even better than Athletes Village, and that’s being translated into a new district energy policy for the city. So you see the point of the power of a model. Unfortunately, too many cities do model developments, but years after, nothing’s really changed with business-as-usual development. That’s something we very much wanted to avoid here.
NB: A lot of people think of these big events — Olympics, World Cups — as being a spur for development and physical infrastructure creation, but it seems like you’re taking it further and using it almost as a lab for urban policy.
BT: You have to remember that the second most important moment in Vancouver’s city-building history was our hosting of Expo ’86. That event changed the way we do things as city-builders and really sparked what is now called the Vancouver Model. I say the second most important moment, because the first most important was arguably the refusal to put freeways in Vancouver, particularly through our downtown, in the late 60’s. But Expo ‘86 was a pivotal turning point. It gave the city a huge amount of confidence and started an era of city-building that has really defined “Vancouver-ism”. So we’re well aware that this is our second great event – that the Olympics, like Expo ’86, will be transformative not only in our attitudes, but in the way we do our urbanism.
We set out from day-one to make sure that we were positioned for that transformation. The fun of this challenge is that Vancouver is the most populous urban destination ever to host the Winter Olympics. Our population is about 600,000, in a region of about 2.1 million. For most Summer Olympics, the event areas for the Olympics are often on the urban outskirts. Much of the activity of the Vancouver Winter Olympics is in the middle of our most urban environment. So it’s a massive operational challenge to accommodate an Olympics and the huge influx of people.
NB: Well, it sounds like a big challenge. And if we look back at other cities and other places that have hosted these events, there’s a lot of mixed opinions about how well things have turned out. You look at Athens, which is really struggling to pay off the price of the venues they built for the 2004 Summer Olympics. Even some of Beijing’s beautiful venues are sitting empty and unused.
BT: There has been some comment that Vancouver hasn’t been ambitious enough in its new facilities and particularly its architecture. When you’re being compared against the most recent Summer Olympics in Beijing, with the Bird’s Nest and the Water Cube — well, fiscally responsible cities could kill themselves trying to compete with that kind of expenditure, and we have a very small fraction of that budget. Summer Olympics and Winter Olympics are two very different beasts in terms of scale and funding.
But having said that, I think that the way we’ve handled this very much matches our values as a city. What defines Vancouver is a strong ethic of sustainability, inclusivity, consultation, and hopefully social and environmental responsibility. So we didn’t set out to wow the world with starchitects for single-purpose buildings that we may or may not be able to use in the future.
All of our new buildings and facilities are readily convertible into civic and community uses, and are highly integrated into the civic and community fabric. We know how our facilities are going to be used the day after the Olympics are done. And they’re all part of making our livable city even more livable. As a city that set out to make the greenest and most inclusive Olympics, not the most architecturally exuberant Olympics, our results go a long way to meet our initial goals and values. Are we sustainable and inclusive enough, even though that question is an oxymoron? People will debate that for years.
And it just so happens that we ended up doing all of this when the world is going through a staggering global economic downturn. So the importance of that fiscal responsibility is even more obvious.
NB: When you think about the city as a broad place, you’re investing a fairly large amount of money to host what is essentially a two-week event. Do you think it’s going to be worth it for the city as a whole?
BT: Part of the legacy is in actions that may not have otherwise occurred. There’s a very strong and I think healthy debate about whether we should have spent all this money on reducing homelessness — but to some extent this is a false choice, because that’s never how budget choices ever really line up. As an example, would our federal and provincial government have spent that money to solve homelessness or would they have spent it in other parts of the country, doing other things?
The Olympics actually spurred spending that hadn’t been happening in the areas of homelessness and social housing — until it became obvious that the Olympics were coming. That kind of spark is something that’s hard to quantify in terms of value. One can argue that the money should have come long before the Olympics were announced, and I would agree with that. But it’s still fair to say that the Olympics sparked the expenditure for things like social housing and transit. The Canada Line subway is an example. Some might say the money would have come anyway, others would say that when the economy gets tough, as it did of course, you can never count on the money. The thing about the Olympics is it usually means the money arrives.
NB: You talk a lot about the day after the Olympics, but what about one year after? What’s the city going to be like then?
BT: I think there will be a feeling of greater confidence and maturity. To know you can host this kind of event successfully gives you the confidence to feel you can do just about anything. Economically, it’s truly a world-class opportunity for both tourism and job growth potential. Physically, we will have new models for our urban pattern. I think the Olympic Village essentially shatters the myth that there’s one type of building in Vancouver, the podium-and-point tower. It’s never been true. The attention that we’ll get with the Athletes Village illustrates how well Vancouver has done mid-rise for years, but frankly Athletes Village takes it to a whole new level.
I can’t decide whether it’s Vancouverism 2.0 or if we’re on 4.0 by now. I think a goal is to make sure that financially we come out ahead of the game, even in the context of the economic downturn. But from a physical city building perspective, it’s already a game-changer in so many ways. Architecture and urban form, neighborhood form, district energy, passive design, green roofs, urban agriculture and a new level of public realm design. It not only changes everything for us, but international urbanists and architects are going to be coming to study the results for some time.
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I wonder how familiar my interview would seem, to those working hard in London to be ready to host the World later this summer. I wish the organizers great fortune and success, and much fun in this once-in-a-lifetime experience!
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Part three of this post will come in a few weeks, focusing on the legacies and observations here in Vancouver two years later. Part four will have more observations from London, and many past host cities, on the connections between Olympic legacies and advanced city-making.
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Brent Toderian is President of Toderian UrbanWORKS in Vancouver, and the former Director of Planning for Vancouver (2006-2012). He is the President of the Council for Canadian Urbanism, and an international consultant, writer, speaker and teacher on issues of advanced city-building. He can be reached at brent@toderianurbanworks.com.