![]() His book, Strategic Public Private Partnerships: Innovation and Development, is due out this fall.Mario and sonic at the london 2012 olympic games was great, the wii version that is. He is the founder and president of Marga Inc., a consulting firm providing advice and research to strengthen philanthropy and innovative cross-sector partnerships to address some of today’s most pressing social concerns. Maurrasse is the director of the Program on Strategic Partnerships and Innovation at the Earth Institute. London’s emphasis on long term community benefit in its approach to the Olympics is a tremendous opportunity to raise the bar on how these tremendous events can fuel social and economic benefits for years to come.ĭavid J. ![]() Securing a bid for the Games is traditionally transformative for host cities. The stakes are high at every level for Olympics. Increasingly, local populations will rely on international sporting events to generate opportunity that enhances their lives. The spirit of collaboration Olympics promote is demonstrated in the various cross-sector partnerships aligned with the Games. The long-term impact of the 2012 Games on London communities and the world will unfold in the coming years. The Olympics have been harnessed to focus on some of these critical issues.įor example, according the Environmental News Service from July 17, the Active Travel program at the 2012 Games integrated energy-efficient technology (renewable sources were to power 20 percent of the energy use) and encouraged walking and cycling by visitors- a pioneering effort to turn Olympics into a “green” event. Strategic cross-sector partnerships are emerging around concrete events such as the Olympics, and addressing pressing matters such as climate change, global health and economic development. Indeed, the public-private partnerships embedded in the way the London 2012 Olympics have been organized is just one example of how government and the private sector draw on one another’s resources and expertise to tackle the myriad challenges cities and countries face today. Most recently, the 2008 Beijing Olympics brought a new high-speed train connecting Beijing and neighboring Tianjin, new additions to the city’s subway system, as well as the array of modern sports venues, including the impressive national stadium. ![]() Photo: Official website of the Olympic Movement. The National Stadium at the Beijing Olympics, 2008. Through various projects focusing on youth and sports, skill training and culture, the London Legacy 2020 program aims to ensure that the 2012 Games makes good on London’s promise during its candidacy-to use the event to help develop areas surrounding the Olympics venues. To ensure that East London benefits from the legacy of the Olympics, in fact, the East London Business Alliance established the London Legacy 2020. ![]() Beyond the prestige associated with hosting the Olympics, building the necessary infrastructure to literally welcome the world during the two weeks of the Games offers the host city a legitimate pretext and catalyst for the transformation of parts the city, in line with the city’s broader urban renewal vision. Mega-events like the Olympics have had a long-term impact on host cities. The Greater London Authority contributes £925 million to the Olympic Delivery Authority for the regeneration, infrastructure and facilities for use by present and future Londoners.Ĭould two weeks of sporting events, even the Olympics, justify all these costs? These investments are not only intended to host the Olympics successfully, but revitalize sections of host city London. The UK government is represented through the Department for Culture, Media and Sport, which manages central government funding of the Games and wider regeneration costs. National Lottery funds (£2.2 billion of them) also helped construct facilities hosting the Games. The London 2012 Olympics, for example, are funded by a number of sources, according to its official website: the London Organising Committee of the Olympic Games and Paralympic Games Limited, a private company with a core budget of over £2 billion, was in charge of the planning, funding, preparation and staging of the London 2012 Games.įrom the public sector, the Olympic Delivery Authority-funded by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport, the Greater London Authority, and the Olympic Lottery Distributor-was charged with developing and building the new infrastructures and venues, as well as their post-Games use. For an event of this magnitude and cost, inevitably all resources must be drawn upon. Photo: Official London 2012 websiteīut today’s Olympics are notable for another type of collaboration-between the public and private sectors. ![]()
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