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TIMESTAMPS
The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20120304063707/http://news.bbc.co.uk:80/sport1/hi/olympic_games/7758646.stm
The stadium is on a peninsula, with waterways on three sides. Construction officially started on 22 May 2008, under the watchful eye of then Prime Minister Gordon Brown.
A 20m-high "wrap" will encircle the 900m circumference, decorated with historical sporting champions, participating countries' flags and sponsor logos.
The 80,000-seat stadium is expected to be converted into a 25,000-capacity venue after the Games, although debate still rages as to what it will be used for.
Local football and rugby clubs said they did not want to play on a venue with a permanent running track in place - though West Ham have since expressed their interest - but Games organisers are so far committed to preserving a legacy for athletics.
Aquatics Centre Sports: Swimming, diving, synchronised swimming, water polo, modern pentathlon, Capacity: 17,500 (swimming and diving) and 5,000 (water polo), Cost: £303m (2008 figure)
The Aquatics Centre will be the gateway to the Olympic Park. It will include a 50m pool, a 25m diving pool and a 50m training pool.
Water polo will be held next to it in a temporary venue with competition and warm-up pools.
After the Games the temporary seating will be removed, leaving a venue with 2,500 seats to be used by the local community, clubs and schools, although the could still be capacity increased for major competitions.
Around 17,000 athletes and team officials will be able to stay in the heart of the Olympic Park, with some rooms offering views of the main stadium.
The village will boast landscaped squares, fountains, hairdressers, and internet cafe, medical facilities, a disco and a main dining hall big enough for 5,500 people.
After the Games the village will become part of the overall Stratford City regeneration scheme, which will include a shopping centre and up to 3,300 new homes.
The temporary venue will have 12,000 seats for basketball preliminary matches and quarter-finals, as well as handball semi-finals and finals, and 10,000 seats for wheelchair basketball and wheelchair rugby.
In the tightening economic climate, officials investigated moving the events to an existing venue but concluded that nowhere else would have sufficient capacity.
The basketball finals take place in the larger 02 Arena to the south-west.
After the Games it is expected that parts of the arena will be taken down and relocated elsewhere in the UK.
An old sports centre in use on this site until 2001 has been demolished to make way for a facility that will be used for training during the Olympic Games and as a competition venue for the Paralympics.
After the Games, the venue will be turned into a hockey stadium, an indoor tennis centre and a five-a-side football venue.
The arena will host handball preliminary games and quarter-finals (with semis and finals taking place at the basketball arena) as well as the modern pentathlon disciplines of fencing and shooting.
The concourse level is all glazed, enabling visitors in the Olympic Park to view sport taking place inside, and illuminating the venue when lit at night.
After the Games, it will cater for a wide range of indoor sports including basketball, handball, badminton, netball and volleyball.
Built on the side of a 100-year-old rubbish tip, the velopark is made up of a velodrome and a BMX circuit.
Each will have 6,000 seats for the Olympics but those in the velodrome will remain afterwards, while the BMX circuit seating will be removed.
After the Games, a road cycle circuit and mountain bike course will be added to create a velopark for the local community, local clubs and elite athletes.
Earls Court Exhibition Centre Sports: Volleyball, Capacity: 15,000
The West London venue, which first opened in 1937 and hosts hundreds of events each year, will offer a dedicated venue for indoor volleyball at the Games.
Organisers took the decision to relocate volleyball to Earls Court in 2006, with a view to capitalising on the existing venue and its good transport links.
But they will have to deal with the logistical issues of transporting athletes 11 miles across London from the Olympic Village.
Located at the Royal Victoria Dock, Excel covers 65,000 square metres, boasts "the largest column-free hall in Europe" and is currently used for big trade exhibitions and conferences.
It is home to the annual London Triathlon and several major professional boxing bouts have taken place here.
The plan for 2012 is to create four separate arenas, each holding between 6,000 and 10,000 spectators.
More sports have been moved here since the tough economic climate forced a re-think of building at the Olympic Park.
Greenwich Park Sports: equestrian, modern pentathlon, Capacity: 23,000, Cost: £8.8m (2004 bid figure)
Three-day eventing, showjumping and dressage will take place in front of the Royal Observatory and the National Maritime Museum in London's oldest Royal Park, which has been a World Heritage Site since 1997.
And the final two events of the modern pentathlon - showjumping and running - will also be staged there.
A temporary cross country course is being designed, although conservationists have voiced concern about possible long-term damage to the park.
All the temporary structures will be taken down after the Games.
As beach volleyball takes place just a stone's throw from the Prime Minister's official residence in Downing Street, Horse Guards Parade is perhaps London's quirkiest venue.
Dating from 1745, it is famous for the Trooping of the Colour ceremony on the Queen's official birthday in June.
A temporary arena will be built for the Games, with sand imported especially for the competition. The Guards will move back once it is all over.
Hyde Park Sports: triathlon, swimming (10km open water), Capacity: 3,000, Cost: £6m (2004 bid figure)
Open to the public since 1637, the largest of London's Royal Parks is home to the Serpentine Swimming Club, whose members swim whatever the weather - even on Christmas Day.
The park successfully hosted the prologue time trial before the start of the 2007 Tour de France and cyclists will again be in action there as part of the triathlon.
As well as the 3,000 fans in temporary seats, many more will be able to watch around the park as the triathletes swim, cycle and run.
The park is expected to be home to the music, theatre, film and cultural events that will take place throughout the summer of 2012.
Lord's has been home to cricket since 1814 and hosts more international cricket than any other venue in the UK, with at least two Test matches each year.
An archery range will be created on the outfield of the main ground and on the Nursery ground, to the rear of the main stands.
After the Games, archery equipment from the training, warm up and competition venues will be given to clubs and schools across the country.
Regent's Park Sports: Road cycling, Capacity: 3,000 seats
Regent's Park had originally been earmarked to host baseball and softball but, when those sports were dropped from the Olympic calendar, found itself transformed into the final section of the road cycling course.
Temporary seats will be built around the finishing straight, while spectators can line the rest of the course, which travels through Hampstead Heath.
The seats will be built in June 2012 and dismantled immediately following the road cycling competition, returning the park to its usual state.
Royal Artillery Barracks Sports: shooting, Capacity: 7,500, Cost: £18m
The temporary Olympic shooting facility planned for the barracks at Woolwich has proved one of the more controversial venues for 2012.
Some shooting enthusiasts, disappointed with the poor legacy offered by a temporary venue, preferred the national shooting centre at Bisley, to the south-west of London, but organisers said improving the centre to an Olympic standard would cost too much.
A government review in 2009 concluded that the barracks will remain the 2012 venue.
The former Millennium Dome has been transformed from a white elephant into a thriving music and entertainment venue.
The arena had its first taste of Olympic sporting action in 2009, when it hosted the World Gymnastics Championships.
The International Olympic Committee's rules on sponsorship mean the venue will operate under the catchy moniker North Greenwich Arena for the duration of the Games.
The new £757m Wembley Stadium endured delays and a critical press during its construction but, by 2012, London's largest sporting venue will offer one of the highlights of the Games.
The old Wembley hosted the Olympic football finals in 1948 - as will the new stadium - while the famous twin towers watched over England's famous 1966 World Cup-winning campaign.
The new Wembley boasts an arch four times the size of the towers.
Organisers have also abandoned plans for a temporary badminton and rhythmic gymnastics venue in North Greenwich, in favour of hosting the two sports at the neighbouring Wembley Arena - a move predicted to save £20m in costs.
Football venues Hampden Park (Capacity: 52,000), Millennium Stadium (74,600), Old Trafford (76,000), St James' Park (52,000), Ricoh Arena (33,000)
Six of the UK's most famous football grounds will host the 2012 men's and women's Olympic tournaments.
The new Wembley Stadium in London provides the venue for the finals of each competition.
The flagship stadia of Wales and Scotland are also venues for matches, as are the homes of Premier League teams Manchester United and Newcastle United.
However, Villa Park in Birmingham was withdrawn in August 2009 because of uncertainty over rebuilding plans. Coventry City's Ricoh Arena was selected in its place in June 2010. It will be renamed the City of Coventry Stadium in order to abide by Olympic rules regarding venue sponsorship.
Broxbourne White Water Canoe Centre Sports: canoe/kayak slalom, Capacity: 12,000, Cost: £14m (2004 bid figure)
On the edge of the 1000-acre Lee Valley Regional Park in Hertfordshire, 19 miles north of the Olympic Village, the site is six miles away from the originally proposed site, which was found to be contaminated.
The development includes a permanent 300m competition course and a 100m warm-up course, entirely artificial, with white water created through a system of pumps.
Temporary seats will be removed but both courses will remain after the Games, for canoeists of all levels and also for whitewater rafting.
Eton College constructed this eight-lane, 2,200m course near Windsor Castle, about 25 miles west of London, in a 400 acre park with a Nature Conservation area.
In 2006 it hosted the Rowing World Championships, with high praise from both competitors and spectators, and only minor work will be needed to upgrade the facilities for the Games.
Rather than being bussed from the Olympic Village on the other side of London, athletes will be housed at the Royal Holloway College, 10 miles away.
The Essex venue was a late choice to replace Weald Country Park as the mountain biking venue, following changes to the technical requirements for the Olympic course.
The switch was made in August 2008, reducing the time available for consultation, design work and construction, though the finished venue calls for comparatively little - a course, plus temporary grandstands.
The hilly, open grassland offers the prospect of a challenging course as well as plenty of viewing positions for spectators.
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