The best way to begin might be to say that there are three
distinct categories of Olympic games sites that the City of Paris wants
to make ultra-safe for visitors and athletes, each with its own unique
security challenges.
First, there are the many
official, already-existing sporting venues (stadiums, arenas, tennis
courts, aquatic centers, etc.) located throughout Paris and France.
These require the least amount of novel security measures, whether in
the form of protective perimeters or the (unusual) methods used to
maintain them.
Included among these is the historic
Grand Palais, an architectural jewel from 1900 located at the foot of
the Champs-Elysées. A monumentally massive building with a marvelously
versatile interior space, it regularly plays host to museum exhibitions
of all types, in addition to galas, elaborate fashion shows, concerts,
conventions, and even an ice-skating rink. Turning it into an Olympic
sporting event site wouldn’t have been very difficult.
Second,
and complementing these dedicated sporting facilities, are several
famous outdoor public monuments and historic landmarks that have been
transformed into temporary games sites.
These comprise,
most notably, the Trocadero and the area next to the Eiffel Tower, the
Château de Versailles, the Place de la Concorde, the Alexandre III
Bridge, and the expansive lawns in front of the Hôtel des Invalides.
Massive
amounts of bleachers and facilities for ticketed spectators have been
brought in and creatively set up to adapt to the often unusual contours
and spatial constraints of these areas. Seeing the obelisk at la Place
de la Concorde hidden behind a patchwork of crisscrossing bars and
stands was strange indeed. From the outside, the expansive fenced-in
area, with giant stands rising out from the emptied-out streets, looks
like a curious sort of fairground.
Third, and arguably
most importantly, there is the Seine River itself, which will be the
location of the opening ceremony as well as several aquatic
competitions.
From a security standpoint, the first
category of venues is the most straightforward because entrances and
exits are already part of the structures. All that is necessary to
guarantee spectator and athlete safety is to set up slightly expanded
perimeters around the buildings and flood the access points with staff
and security guards so that no one – or anything – dangerous gets
through.
Think of the Barclays Center on game night.
Plenty of space to accommodate the crowds at the entrance waiting to go
through security, with minimal disruptions to the immediate
surroundings.
The second category of event sites, as
mentioned above, significantly modify public spaces outdoors; they pose
greater security and logistical challenges, as the physical enclosures
separating “outside from inside” – separating the ticketed spectators
from the unticketed – have to be brought in on trucks and set up.
These
barriers are made up of hundreds of miles of what are essentially chain
link fence units (about 10 feet long and 7 feet high) set into concrete
slabs that can be moved around and connected as needed.
They
wrap around the temporary outdoor sporting event sites in odd,
unsightly ways and, notwithstanding the considerable effort to line them
up neatly, look to many like human kennels. (Upset Parisians are
referring to them as cages.)...<<<Read More>>>....
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