I was asked to take this forward and find a suitable event which would achieve a lasting association with the festival. The result was an event which involved a winning combination of boats, water, London 2012, a history of canals and rivers and, fortunately, sunshine last month.
Over the course of the weekend, trips on the 'Jenny Wren' canal boat took passengers from Limehouse Lock up the Limehouse Cut to the River Lea Navigation and stopped at Old Ford Lock to allow people to walk onto the Greenway and see the Olympic Stadium construction site. ODA volunteers joined forces with Richard Rutter, Mark Bensted and Jeremy Batch from British Waterways to take passengers on a magical tour of the London 2012 Games, the history of the Limehouse cut and River Lea navigation.
The Jenny Wren (image courtesy of British Waterways):


























It would be interesting how Sir Norman Forster or David Chipperfield would have designed the Olympic parc or how they would jugde the architectural quality of the Olympic venues. I´m sure I would have prefered Sir Norman Forsters design because there would be a connection with other important buildings like Wembley, the British Museum and so on with the Olympic area - the style would have been similar then. For sure it would have been a first class design like a modern fine formed sculpture. He knows how to respect the historic area and typical British traditions in architecture are turned around in a new innovative and exciting, unexpected way without appearing bombastic or oversized and therefore typical British. It is modern art in architecture and outstanding. In my opinion the swimming venue is the best piece of architecture.