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As the date for the 2012 London Olympics edged ever closer, something happened. The harrumphers lost their nerve and started desperately asking whether anyone knew how they might secure some tickets, even to the egg-and-spoon race if that was all that was left.
I was briefly in Paris this week and it was impressive to see how so many Parisians still haven’t blinked. Almost everyone you speak to reveals plans to flee to the south of France, Bordeaux or the North Pole; anywhere rather than linger in Paris. I have met more Londoners than Parisians with tickets to the events. Even the other half is ditching me for the opening ceremony – to sit and spectate, not join the parade (being the fastest rider on an electric commuter bicycle is sadly not the sort of skill that wins you a medal).
Attending the London Olympics is still an experience that I cherish, so I hope that the Parisian enthusiasm gets uncorked soon. It will be amazing. And whatever the doubters decide to do, Monocle will be broadcasting from Paris across the full two-week arc of the Games, in partnership with Allianz. Then the naysayers will really know what they are missing out on.
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The Eurostar terminal in London is primped in preparation for the Games and is going all out to welcome British athletes and officials heading to Paris. Well, they had stuck up a few plastic Union Jack flags.
On Monday morning there were already many people heading through security in Team GB kit, lugging sports backpacks larger than Guadeloupean tortoises. Had that struggling man packed too many discuses? Was that perspiring woman charged with delivering some shot puts? And did that super-long bag contain the poles for a vaulter or perhaps the mast of a yacht? It was an enjoyable distraction trying to guess the person’s sporting skill by a glance at their misshapen carry-ons.
Though, there was a better entourage in my train carriage. An immaculately dressed woman with her three children and as many nannies, some protective muscle, and a few people there to just flap around. French police were there to welcome her at Gare du Nord and ease her way through the concourse crowds. As I waited to spot my colleague Nic Monisse disembarking, I watched admiringly as her courtiers and bag-carriers were drawn along in her wake like flapping seagulls following a majestic yacht. It’s a look I doubt I will ever have the need to master.
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On Thursday night I was taken to the theatre to see the musical Standing at the Sky’s Edge. I might be one of the last people I know to have seen it. It’s the story of Park Hill, a vast, brutalist public-housing project that was built in Sheffield in the late 1950s and early 1960s to house some 3,000 people. The show uses the songs of Richard Hawley to tell the stories of various people who inhabit one apartment across the decades. It’s beautiful (and you have until 3 August to see it).
It was an interesting moment to be in the audience. The UK’s new Labour government unveiled plans this week to build 1.5 million homes over the next five years. It says that it’s all about “how, not if”. To hit that magic number, it’s going to set targets for local authorities, build a next generation of new towns and “blitz planning reform”, though here in London the word “blitz” seems inappropriate when discussing housing. But reaching that 1.5 million milestone should not be the singular sign of success. It’s what is built that matters.
The post-war architects who designed Park Hill – and numerous other housing projects across the UK – were responding to an urgent need. A desire to get things done fast; to give people homes. But the pace of that development was one of the reasons that estates such as Park Hill crumpled and fell into disrepair and then became cauldrons of crime and despair. While the UK has many good builders, it also has plenty who bolster their profits with thin walls, the lowest-spec-allowed windows and rooms too small for family life to unfold in. You have to be hopeful. But after seeing Standing at the Sky’s Edge, you also realise how making boxes that keep the rain off our heads is not enough to bestow dignity and hope. We need 1.5 million homes where design, public realm, community, transport and access to key services are all taken into consideration.