The Landscape Legacy of the Olympics, Part 9: The Olympic Soil Strategy
An interview with Tim O #39;Hare of Tim O #39;Hare Associates. This is the ninth of a series of ten interviews on the role of Landscape Architects in the Olympic Games. To find out more visit: http://www.landscapeinstitute.org Use the links below to skip to a specific question: 0:14 How did you get involved with the Olympic Project? 0:38 When did you apply for the work? 1:11 Describe your involvement at each stage of the project. 3:14 Briefly outline the soil strategy you developed. 7:11 How many types of soil were required? 8:23 How did the soil cope with the adverse weather conditions before the games started? 8:57 How much soil was used to construct the landscape scheme throughout the Olympic Park? 9:24 Why was subsoil such an important part of the design? 10:26 Was the soil strategy site wide or were different parts of the park treated differently? 11:05 How was the soil strategy implemented? 12:30 What kind of research or experimentation did you need to do to develop your solution/strategy? 13:20 Were any of the soil trials carried out onsite? 13:36 How much topsoil was recycled/created through the remediation process? 14:20 Explain the topsoil manufacturing process. 15:35 Where did the other soils come from? 15:48 What materials are taken from the quarries? 16:19 How did the soil reach the Olympic site? 17:19 What was your role during the construction phase of the landscape scheme? 18:28 What areas do you think have not been successful or could be improved? 19:17 What innovations ...From:landscapeinstituteukViews:0 0ratingsTime:31:23More inEducation

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