4 things a week: a muse on the Paris Olympics

4 things a week: a muse on the Paris Olympics


World

The night before the greatest event of your sporting career and you have to sleep on a cardboard box. But at least it’s better for the planet. Paris is aiming to make this year’s Olympics the greenest yet. In fact they initially set out to be "the first Games with a positive contribution to the climate”. But have backtracked on that. With up to 80% of the carbon emissions at an event as big as the Olympics, created by spectators travelling to and from the games, you would have to either refrain from selling tickets or buy a LOT of carbon credits to achieve carbon neutrality; the measurement by which they will ultimately be held to account. At least the London games set a target of selling 75% of tickets to UK fans, something the Paris organisers don’t have planned.?

Transport and off-setting aside however, there are some pretty cool initiatives from a sustainability perspective; with a plant-based, zero waste catering plan and a new cycle network connecting the venues being just two of the efforts they are taking to cut carbon emissions. The most notable difference between Paris and two previous games in London and Rio however, is that only 2 stadiums are being built; an aquatics centre and an arena for badminton and rhythmic gymnastics.?

As someone who lives walking distance from the Olympic Park, though, the legacy of the regeneration project that hosting in 2012 was the catalyst for, has had an incredible impact on the local area. The post-industrial backwater was transformed into the largest park built in London in 150 years. Greater than Hyde Park and Kensington Gardens combined. The stadiums and aquatic centre are used by millions every year and the free green space is a haven for wildlife. If carbon emissions are one measurement, surely this has to be another. The problem is, the long term benefits of regeneration projects are much more difficult to quantify. How do you measure ecological factors, or community impact? Measuring carbon is vital in a rapidly warming world, but if it becomes the only measure are we preventing bolder initiatives? And is 30km of new cycle paths going to be the only legacy of the Paris Olympics.?


The cardboard beds by Airweave were first used in Tokyo in 2021

Innovation

Sticking with the Olympics, look out for Kenyan marathon runner Hellen Obiri’s new shoes. The latest innovation from Swiss brand On, the Cloudboom Strike LS trainers are not woven, or knitted, but rather sprayed onto a mould as a single continuous filament. Think Bella Hadid at the SS23 Coperni show when she wowed the audience with a spray-on dress, but in shoe form. These ultra-light weight trainers are said to have a 75% low-carbon emissions than On's other racing shoes, although I’m not sure they would be anywhere near as durable either. Still - I guess we should see how well Obiri fairs before we pass full judgement.

Inspiration

A far cry from Wolff Olins identity for London 2012, the Paris Olympics has a distinctly different, paired back feel. Pastel colours, Art Deco graphic styling. I wouldn’t go as far to say it’s a bit boring, but it certainly feels safe. I’m sure the French would say sophisticated. Either way, here is a little montage. The duvet is quite nice and the medals have an inlay made from original iron from the Eiffel tower which is pretty cool.



Morrama

For those of you who read to the bottom... SAVE THE DATE!

In the 9 years since the Morrama studio was set up, we’ve never let anyone in to see behind the scenes. Until now. On September 16th from 3pm, as part of London Design Festival , we will be opening our doors to visitors for the first time, sharing our process and our projects. More details to come. Check your Wonka bars for golden tickets.

Want this content and more direct to your inbox, you can sign up here.


P.s. Just incase you got to the end of this and aren't sure who I am, I'm:

Solveiga Pak?tait?

Chief Design Officer & Founder | Mimica (Makers of Bump?)

7 个月

I agree that London made the most of its new infrastructure and I didn't know that they reserved so many tickets for UK supporters! There's also an interesting school of thought that every Olympics should be held in a dedicated Olympic village in Greece so that the infrastructure can be built and upgraded for the long term, the athletes can sleep in normal beds, and athletes can train there year round and it would be well-used. I personally think it would a shame to lose the international showcase that each host city brings, but it's certainly an intriguing idea...

回复
Andy Trewin Hutt

Associate Director at Morrama (Certified B Corp) | Problem solving for startups and individuals | Advisor and consultant

8 个月

?? A great use of texture across different mediums. The Paris Identity will certainly make some money across the merch sales. It is very pretty. In a time of extreme graphics and reaction farming, I'm here for a little bit of reserved/timeless artistic license.

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Jo Barnard的更多文章

  • 4 things a week: Unreasonable conversations

    4 things a week: Unreasonable conversations

    I've just come back from an Unreasonable residency. 13 startup CEOs and 30+ mentors, hanging out together in a…

    1 条评论
  • 4 things a week: International Women's Day

    4 things a week: International Women's Day

    Sorry for those who have missed my ramblings, I've been busy working on something exciting..

    16 条评论
  • 4 things a week: move over America

    4 things a week: move over America

    This week it's all things China as I block America from my social media feed. 1.

    1 条评论
  • 4 things a week: our top picks from CES

    4 things a week: our top picks from CES

    World This week Keir Starmer came out with his plans to make the UK an AI superpower in a hope that it will increase…

    7 条评论
  • 4 things a week: looking back at 2024

    4 things a week: looking back at 2024

    Last year was big year for change, both personal and professional. But I’ve picked out four things that happened that…

    7 条评论
  • 4 things a week: building the future

    4 things a week: building the future

    Had to take a break for a little while to focus on other things, but 4 things a week is back! 1. World A Japanese team…

    3 条评论
  • 4 things a week: Trump

    4 things a week: Trump

    A distinct feeling of deja vu this morning as we re-enter the Trump era. 1.

    2 条评论
  • 4 things a week: Elon

    4 things a week: Elon

    I know this is supposed to come out every week, but things got a bit hectic. So.

    4 条评论
  • 4 things a week: Orion plus other things

    4 things a week: Orion plus other things

    1. World It’s been a while since I wrote my 4 things, in which time there has been quite a few things that have caught…

  • 4 things a week: Digital twins

    4 things a week: Digital twins

    From the great RTO (return to office) to upcoming events I'm speaking at, it's my 4 things a week! 1. World I’m pretty…

    1 条评论

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了