News

Atkins wins place on latest London Legacy Development Corporation framework

Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park aerial views.

Atkins has won a place on the latest London Legacy Development Corporation framework.

The company has secured the development framework place from the organisation overseeing the 2012 Olympics legacy - extending its relationship with the London site to more than 20 years by the end of the contract.

The London Legacy Development Corporation (LLDC) has awarded Atkins single source status as a multi-disciplinary provider for a range of services focussed on creating places to live, work and play as part of the transformation of the area of East London which played host to the games 10 years ago.

Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park was the venue for some of the most memorable moments of the 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games.

It is now expected to be the site of long-lasting legacy for the area, which has always been one of the key aims of hosting the games.

Atkins first started working with London 2012 Olympics organisation in 2005, when it was announced the UK capital had been successful in its bid for the games. 

This latest framework is the third framework Atkins has won from LLDC, which will run for four years.

Having worked successfully to deliver the infrastructure necessary for one of the most memorable games of recent times, Atkins has since been working with LLDC to deliver on its promise to create a vibrant, innovative and sustainable new neighbourhood for the city.

Atkins Infrastructure managing director Mike McNicholas was project director for the original London 2012 delivery scheme. 

“We as a business, and I personally, started working on London 2012 in December 2005, a few months after the UK had won the bid,” he said. 

“With the new framework appointment, it will take the time we’ve been working on the development and its legacy to 21 years, which is a fantastic achievement in many respects.

“The framework will provide Atkins a platform to assist the legacy agenda of putting social value at the heart of the Olympic legacy. 

“But also, this framework win really serves to highlight the importance of always keeping customer focus upper-most over such a long period, while at the same time adapting to stay relevant to the changing client over what will be more than 20 years.”

The LLDC was formed in 2012 with the aim of transforming Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park into a dynamic new heart for East London, creating opportunities for local people and driving innovation and growth in the capital and more widely in the UK.

Mark Camley, executive director of Park Operations and Venues for LLDC said: “Atkins has consistently delivered at a high level since the inception of the LLDC 10 years’ ago, and before that as part of the delivery team for London 2012.

“They will help us deliver on our promise of a lasting and meaningful legacy for London 2012, with sustainability and social value at its heart.”

If you would like to contact Karen McLauchlan about this, or any other story, please email kmclauchlan@infrastructure-intelligence.com.