Skip to content

Leader – Why this betrayal of the promised Olympic legacy?

As Hackney Wick artists are booted out of their studios, the body in charge of delivering the Olympic legacy looks set on betraying its own principles

Hackney Citizen crest
Hackney Citizen crest

Table of Contents

The world is watching Olympians compete in Rio in a sporting spectacle that has been beset by controversy. Four years ago, eyes were on East London for what even critics of the impact of the Games conceded was a great excuse for a knees-up.

In light of the Hackney Citizen‘s story about legacy bosses displacing artists from an area they themselves designated a cultural quarter, it is fitting to recall a key part of London’s successful bid for the 2012 Games: the Cultural Olympiad, and the creativity the event was to unleash.

People have been making things in Wick and the lower Lee Valley for hundreds of years. The area is a hive of printers, designers and small-scale manufacturers, so it is outrageous the London Legacy Development Corporation (LLDC) should now be betraying its own principles by giving artists the boot.

Health, exercise and a cleaner environment were also meant to feature in the legacy for London. It beggars belief, therefore, that the LLDC is hell-bent on wiping out a cycle-friendly crossing for the benefit of car drivers.

The Games may be long gone from London, but controversy over their real legacy shows no sign of abating.

Latest