Yearly Archives: 2012

Evolving the Shoe, Evolving the Terrain

mizuno_wi9w

I occasionally receive the odd running-related press release, and got an interesting one from Mizuno recently, announcing a couple of new running shoes – the Wave Rider 16 and Wave Inspire 9 – the two being quite similar but with the latter being more of a support shoe and a fraction (10g) heavier.

The shoes look the part as you would expect, and are appropriately vividly coloured and styled – very much the trend these days, and why not – at this time of year, much of the time it’s dark when I’m running, and it makes sense to be as visible as possible.

Anyway I mention the shoes for three reasons.

Firstly I’m impressed that this is the 16th iteration of the Wave Rider shoe. Mizuno clearly know they are on to a good thing – not launching a new brand every year or so, but instead evolving a well known one. The average running shoe only lasts for 3-400 miles so a typical club runner might need to buy a new one twice a year. If the shoe is good, then the club runner will not want to change it for another brand if the old one is no longer available – they might just as easily change the manufacturer altogether, but they would much prefer to stick the name of the shoe that they know – shoes are the critical tool for a runner. So, give them what they want, and take the opportunity to refine it.

But you also need to keep new people discovering the manufacturer and brand, and also update the look to keep it looking new and relevant. So – relaunch it!

The second reason I mention is that I got a rather nice Mizuno freebie – which just happened to be a Wave Rider 15 – during the launch of an unrelated training shoe by them, earlier this year. Like the new shoes here, it wasn’t a subtle shoe – purple and lime green. When added to my red, white and blue running tops, the look is somewhat psychedelic. But it’s a very comfortable shoe and has become my current running shoe of choice. This is partly due to superstition – I started wearing my previous new shoe when I hadn’t fully recovered from an injury, and I put the resulting niggles down to the shoe and not my injury – d’oh. But it’s surprising just how superstitious you can be when it comes to injuries.

Anyway, long story short, I’ve been very pleased with my “v15″ Wave Rider the last few months – I even took it to the Venice Street Race in November, although Venice was underwater at the time* so there was not much running involved, and it could well be the v16 that I end up getting next, when the current one wears out – or maybe there will even be a v17 by then? It looks like the Wave Riders will be evolving for a while yet.

The third reason is the that PR came with some photos, of runners running in the shoes, like you would expect. But the locations strongly reminded me of urban orienteering races. None of the running in the photos is taking place on roads, but instead they are along the seafront, through building courtyards, along garden paths – all the places where the best urban orienteering takes places. The campaign’s ad (short video – 30s) even includes the runner ascending some external stairs – very Barbican. You could easily imagine a control in each of these photos. In fact I very nearly doctored the photos to add one in the background. I don’t think Mizuno would have been too impressed at that though.

I’m planning a big urban orienteering race – in fact the second biggest standalone one in the world – next September. It might even be the biggest in the world next year, because the traditional incumbent, Venice, has got cancelled in 2013, after some concerns were raised during this year’s flooded race. Details of the race I’m planning will be up at the end of this month – all I can say for now is that it will have a distinctly watery feel to it. As the planner, I get to pick where the control sites go. And I’ll certainly be aiming to pick ones like the sorts shown in the photos here.

* Resulting in a rather saline shoe now. I’m not sure if it would survive a wash cycle.

mizuno_wi9m

Urban Events – How Far Do People Travel?

Intrigued by a comment on the Nopesport forums suggesting that local clashes rather than a very major international clash were the thinking behind the scheduling of a future urban event, I thought I would do some analysis of how far people travel to races, using my stats database of results.

To do this, I’ve excluded (a) people listed with a club of “IND”, “None” or “” (probably local non-orienteers), (b) people in non-geographical clubs (e.g. RAFO, AROS), as it’s difficult to pinpoint where they travelled from, and (c) clubs with less than 100 runs in the 3 or so years the events database runs back for – this leaves 113 clubs, the largest being BOK with 8534 runs. The latter exclusion also excludes most foreign clubs, although a number do make it through – particularly Irish ones. I’ve also assumed that remaining people live in the centroid of their club’s area of influence – which is “guesstimated” by me based on the name of the club. I’ve also assumed that the event, put on by the club, also takes place in the centroid of that club’s area of influence.

Anyway, here’s where everyone* travelled from to get to the Edinburgh City Race in January 2012:

…and for comparison, here’s where people came from to go to the London City Race in September 2012:

…and York’s City Race in June 2012:

…and everyone (& their dog) went to Aberystwyth in July 2012 for the biggest urban race ever in the UK:

None of these maps are normalised to each other – thickness directly corresponds to the number of people.

Tobler’s Law in full effect for these races, of course, but also showing a decent amount of long distance travel to London and Edinburgh. For Aberystwyth, everyone was already there for the rest of the Welsh 6 Days event.

Finally, for a bit of fun, here are the events that I (and also my namesake in Devon!) have been to in the last three or so years:

* Bearing in mind the filters outlined at the top of the post.

Background imagery courtesy of OpenStreetMap contributors.

Legacy Timetable

Here’s the announced timetable for the transition and reopening of the Olympic Park and a few other Olympic-related venues:

  • 8 September 2012 – Lea Valley Whitewater Centre reopens
  • 10 September 2012 – Lee Navigation Towpath reopens
  • Late September 2012 – Northern Retail Lifeline and Angel Road access to Stratford City reopens
  • 30 September 2012 – The Greenway (except at Stratford High Street) and the View Tube reopens (some reports say the beginning of December instead.)
  • February 2013 – Canal Park opens
  • Spring 2013 – Temple Mill Lane reopens
  • 27 July 2013 – North Park and Multi-Use Arena (aka Copper Box) reopens, London Lions move into the Copper Box, Waterden Road opens
  • Summer 2013 – East Village (aka the Olympic Village)opens
  • 4 August 2013 – Ride London race starts from the Olympic Park
  • September 2013 – East Marsh reopens
  • December 2013 – Velo Park and Eton Manor reopens
  • Early 2014 – White Post Lane reopens
  • March 2014 – South Plaza, Aquatics Centre, Orbit, IBC/MPC reopens (although this brochure says 2013 for the Orbit and the South Plaza
  • August 2014 – Stadium reopens
  • Late 2014 – The Greenway (at Stratford High Street) reopens
  • 2014 – First houses in Chobham Manor (site of the Basketball Arena) finished

A Change of Direction

Regular readers will have noticed that my last seven posts, and the great majority of posts this year, have been about the Olympic Games – specifically, the Olympic Park in East London. I’ve been pretty excited about London 2012, but I’m just as excited about what comes next for the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park, to give it its post-games name. Yep Sport started as an orienteering events and training blog – but Attackpoint largely serves that purpose for me now, so while I’ll continue to mention orienteering, cycling, running, hillwalking and OpenStreetMap from time-to-time, I’m going to focus more closely on what happens to the Olympic Park in the next few years – and not just because I think it will make an amazing venue for a future orienteering race to complement the City Race that I co-founded in 2008.

I already have a couple of ties to the Olympic Park. Until recently, I lived just the other side of Victoria Park, and could see the lighting gantries of the Olympic Stadium, under construction, from my kitchen window. I’m now further up the Lea Valley but still just a short cycle ride away from the Park. Also I was responsible for naming one of the five neighbourhoods that will be built, over the next 15 years, in the park – namely East Wick – it’s the bit east of Hackney Wick appropriately enough, and I like the name “Wick” as I spent a year near Wick in the far north of Scotland. Coincidently, my current duties as an Olympic volunteer, or Games Maker, have me working by the International Broadcast Centre (IBC) in the north-west part of the park – which is the bit that will become East Wick.

At the moment I’m gathering some links relevant to the legacy plans for the park.

Top: CGI image from the LLDC website. Bottom: Aerial image of the park just before the Olympic Games, from Google Maps.

The Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park – A Tangible Legacy

The London Legacy Development Corporation, who have the job of turning the Olympic Park into a public park post-games, have released a tantalising artist’s impression of the Olympic Park as it might look in Spring 2014, when much of it will have opened to the public as a public park.

Here’s a recent view, taken just a few days before the start of the Olympic Games:

Here’s the LLDC’s image of the park in 2014:

The main differences are the removal of the temporary spans on the bridges, making them more slender, and the greening of much of the tarmac/concrete plazas with natural features. The temporary seating stands around the Aquatic Centre disappear, as does the whole Water Polo arena. Bridge “C” between the stadium “island” and the rest of the park has disappeared completely too. The huge “Spotty Bridge” has also disappeared, with just two slender bridges on either side of it remaining.

Here’s what the park might look like in 2030, with the addition of various blocks of housing – this is a modified version of the above image:

It looks like the park will be an exciting location for a future park orienteering race, possibly making a compelling weekend by combining it with an associated City Race.

Top photo: Dominic Lipinski/PA. Other images: London Legacy Development Corporation.

Olympic Bling – Pin Trading at London 2012

The medals aren’t the only shiny things at London 2012. Pin trading is a long Olympic tradition, and while, for the first week, I was mildly curious about the lanyards of some of my fellow volunteers being adored with various badges, a couple of donations meant that I was hooked by the middle weekend of the Olympics.

Above is the current set on my lanyard.

Everyone seems to have different rules for trading pins – I’ve made up my own, which means my collection tends to have smaller and more specialised pins than most others:

  • A – 1 point for every fixing on the back of the pin
  • B – 1 point if the pin has recessed/embossed sections
  • C – 1 point if the pin has no sponsor words or logos on the front
  • D – 1 point if it mentions “London 2012″
  • E – 1 point if it has the Olympic rings (standalone)
  • F – 1 point if it has the London 2012 logo
  • G – 1 point if has a country’s flag on it
  • H – 1 point if it is individually numbered

So far, my pin trading narrative has been:

Pin Trade Type Who Points
Games Maker colour Given LOCOG 4 (AABF)
Apple iPad (black) Given Friend 3 (ACG)
Apple iPhone (white) Collected Apple Store 3 (ACG)
Russian flag Given Journalist 5 (ACDEG)
NBC Swapped iPad (3pts) Army soldier 3 (ACD)
Sverige Swapped Games Maker (4pts) Army soldier 2 (AC)
Apple iPad (white) Collected Apple Store 3 (ACG)
Samsung (Sherlock) Collected Samsung booth 1 (A)
USA flag Swapped Sverige (2pts) Volunteer 4 (ACEG)
Saudi Arabia NOC Swapped NBC (3pts) G4S guard 3 (ACE)
Samsung (Shakespeare) Collected Samsung booth 1 (A)
Games Maker bronze Given LOCOG 4 (AABF)
OBS IBC building Swapped Saudi Arabia NOC (3pts) Collector 6 (AABCDE)
Samsung (Umbrella) Given Friend 1 (A)
Samsung (Umbrella) Given Friend 1 (A)
Samsung (King Arthur) Swapped Samsung (Umbrella) (1pt) Bus despatcher 1 (A)
Fuji Television Swapped 3x Samsung + iPad (6pts) Bus despatcher 5 (ACDFH)

Some people are weighed down with around 20 pins dangling around their necks, while some hide them away on their bags (which is the only place where we are officially allowed to have them) and others don’t have them at all…

Where to get pins

The main area for “professional” pin traders is not the offical venue – the Coca-Cola Pin Trading building near the Orbit – but actually it’s at what is perhaps the most exciting area of the whole games. The area is a small 200m long, 30m wide concrete plaza. On the south side is Stratford International station, with the Javelin high-speed trains to King’s Cross. On the north side is the slightly useless Stratford International DLR station. To the east is an entrance for athletes to the Olympic Village, and to the west is the media entrance to the Olympic Park and the shuttle buses that run to various park venues and the Main Press Centre.

The area is accessible without a ticket to events in the Olympic Park – and so is the best place for non ticket-holders to see athletes, particularly as the press often use this “neutral” area to carry out interviews with their athletes. On the south side of the plaza, adjacent to Stratford International, is where 10-15 pin traders have set up their collections.

To start a collection off, the Samsung and Apple stores, at Stratford City, are giving away pins at a steady rate. Some collectors will swap these for a big collection of old (pre-2012) Olympic pins, and you can go from there.

Olympic Park T Minus 5

Here are some photos from the Olympic Park, on a sunny Sunday with just five days to go until the opening ceremony. If the sun stays around, it will be a lovely park to wander around in.

The park is looking lovely:

Some mysterious art here:

Each set of recycling bins, throughout the park, include a dedicated poncho bin – hopefully these will not need to be used:

The Velodrome is looking as graceful as ever. White boards cover the windows, no peeking in!

Parts of the Olympic Park are very green indeed:

Further down, the Orbit is accompanied by its own garden:

Wenlock might be around for longer than I thought:

Here’s the full album.

Olympic Park coming Together

Final preparations are being made in the Olympic Park – barriers and diggers are moving away:

…the flowers are coming to full bloom (no doubt helped by the excessive rain over the last few days):

…the temporary sponsor pavilions, entrance gates, signposts and watchtowers are springing up (this is the fantastic looking Coca-Cola Pavilion by Pernella and Asif, alumni of the Bartlett at UCL):

…and the plastic wrap around the stadium is finally appearing:

…along with some bespoke art (this is RUN by Monica Bonvicini):

…in some unusual places (some work by Lemn Sissay on a transformer unit):

It’s all coming together!

Latest album, & all my Olympic Park photos so far.

Inside the Olympic Park

Here’s some new photos from the Olympic Park in east London.

The main changes recently are:

  • It’s the first time the Park feels like a park and not a building site!
  • A more obvious entrance to the park is being created – Stratford Gate – consisting of a pair of large triangular gantries that people will pass underneath. It hasn’t been “dressed” yet.
  • The plastic “wrap” has started to appear around the outside of the Olympic Stadium. Each strip turns inwards near the base and becomes coloured, with seating block numbers appearing on the coloured portion.
  • The giant wooden McDonalds building is nearing completion.
  • Installation of the RUN sculpture outside the Copper Box look about complete.
  • Sponsor pavilions are appearing – Panasonic’s is near the McDonalds and looks quite attractive, although it feels rather out of place in a sporting complex.
  • Cisco has a very large, obvious and ugly brightly coloured pavilion mounted on top of the Westfield Stratford City complex, facing directly out to the park and the Aquatic Centre in particular.

New Olympic Park Map

Here’s an updated Olympic Park Map, an extract of which is above. This one is notable as it includes names for many of the bridges in the park.

From north to south:

Eton Manor Bridge
Red Bridge
Waterfall Bridge
London Way Bridge
Channelsea Crossing
Halfway Bridge
Spotty Bridge
Water Polo Bridge
Stratford Walk
Aquatics Bridge
Purple Bridge

There’s also bridges A, B, C, D and E surrounding the Olympic Stadium.
Plus several unnamed bridges in the back-of-house part of the park.