Olympic Village Public Realm Study
With partners, the elementslab conducted an observational study of people using the public realm at the Olympic Village in Vancouver, BC to evaluate if the design goals and strategies were being met in practice.
With partners, the elementslab conducted an observational study of people using the public realm at the Olympic Village in Vancouver, BC to evaluate if the design goals and strategies were being met in practice.
Research Team
Cynthia Girling
Kejia Zheng
Marjan Ebneshahidi
Hanyu Gao
The public realm of the Olympic Village was designed with intent to create a sense of place in a very walkable and livable neighbourhood. This study evaluated the public realm against its goals of: expressing sustainability, enabling a vibrant public experience, developing a sense of place, inspiring connections to the site and its history, connecting to adjacent neighbourhoods, and enhancing the pedestrian and cyclist experience.
Short video clips captured people moving through, and hanging out in the Village Square, along the waterfront and in Hinge Park from December 2015 to July 2016. On-line survey reported on people found using the spaces. Through analysis and mapping the data, we found significant numbers of people using the public spaces throughout the year, in all weather, during the week and on weekends. In poor weather, people were mostly moving- walking, jogging and biking. In good weather and on weekends the numbers of people sitting and hanging out increased dramatically. In the survey, a large majority of people reported returning to use the public spaces at least once each week, and more.
Except where otherwise noted, the original work by Cynthia Girling and Ronald Kellett presented on this website is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
elementslab is an applied urban design and environment research group in the School of Architecture + Landscape Architecture and the Centre for Interactive Research in Sustainability at the University of British Columbia.