Yesterday, Chipps headed down to South Benfleet, Essex, to see how things are coming on with the 2012 Olympic mountain bike venue.
(Note, pictures have been shrunk a little to fit in our new page – click them for a supersize pop-out though)

The construction started in July and there’s been a great deal of progress made already. The builders reckon that the course is 60% complete so far. The venue is owned by the Salvation Army and is home to its Rare Breeds Farm and very fine tea shop. The Salvation Army has owned and run the farm for 100 years and there’s a mix of rolling hills, bits of oak woodland, wickedly sharp gorse and that fine view of the Thames Estuary.

OK, first we’ll get the bitching over with. It’s been done enough already, but just for everyone’s benefit, we’ll go through it one last time.
No, there aren’t any mountains in Essex (and there are barely any rocks either…) and yes, the Olympic sailing is taking place in Portland {Edit}. But the LOCOG and UCI have chosen this corner of Essex for the Olympic XC mountain biking. It’s going ahead, whatever anyone says, so let’s move on and look forward to what’s actually going to happen.
I’ll admit that I’ve been very big critic of the bulldozing of Eastway to make room for the velodrome, and in not having the racing anywhere that’s particularly indicative of UK mountain biking, but I’m going to have to admit that I was quite impressed with the scene that’s taking shape down in Benfleet. We started humbly enough, in a cowshed on the Salvation Army’s rare breeds farm – the crowd a mix of local Essex and South East media and mountain bike journos. Steve from Shred had come up from Plymouth, I’d come from Yorkshire, Dave Arthur was there from Londoners Bikemagic and James C-W was up from Future in Bath. Even Kitch was there from London Cyclist. No signs of our Croydon cousins though. We had introductions from the Councillors on the political side, the Major from the Salvation Army and David Luckes, who’s from LOCOG and in charge of sorting many of the venues. Everyone was obviously overjoyed to talk about how amazing the venue was and how it was great to have the Olympics come to this corner of Essex.
We all wanted to see the venue… so we were soon on the ten minute walk along a narrow path to where the building work has been going on since July. There were a few top riders drafted in for our photographing pleasure, plus course designer Martyn Salt. You’ll know Martyn as being the guy behind the XC NPS and a generally good, if rather hectically busy, guy.

As you crest the hill, the initial view is very impressive. Much of the action takes place in one curving amphitheatre, that pushes into the hillside, with its open edge backing on to the Thames Estuary. One of the boasts of the course is that you can see the majority of the course from many points. With the two or three valleys filled with what’s hoped to be 20,000 spectators, this should make for some great viewing. The course also can be covered by a mere 20 cameras, unlike the 45 or so needed in Beijing.

The course surface is going to be probably 70% manmade ‘trail centre’ style fine pea-gravel with numerous rock ‘features’ built into the hillside. There are some technical rock step-ups, some technical rock slab descents (real ‘full fork travel’ jobs too) and some crowd pleasing features like an over/under tunnel/bridge combo. While it currently looks like an orange scar, that’ll soon wear in to look a lot more natural come August 2012.
One obvious criticism of Essex is a lack of elevation, but the organisers are keen to point out that the elevation difference between the highest part of the course and the lowest is 70m. Compare that to Beijing, which had 55m and you see the potential for a good course – and given the winding nature of it and the multiple climb/descent combos and it looks like the course will be as testing as it has to be. There’s virtually nowhere to sit up and take a rest, or a drink, and with a hoped-for lap time of around 15-18 mins, it’ll make for some very hard racing over the two hours.
Now, if you’ve been to something like the Fort William World Cup, you’ll be used to a certain standard of entertainment for your money. And talking of which, prices have just been announced for the mountain biking – which are going to be £45 and £20 (per day) – although there looks like being a few more variations on those. We’re used to wandering around the pits and demo areas, we’re used to seeing the practice, seeing the athletes warming up and so on. This will all be different for the Olympics. For a start, the riders will be in national teams, not trade teams, so there’s likely going to be less tech support to see – and there’s currently no real plan for a tech-expo area. Olympic athletes live in a security ‘bubble’ and will likely travel from the Olympic village by train (with bikes? We’re not sure) and head straight to their country’s compound, warm up, grid up and race.
Spectators will arrive, get to see the riders maybe doing some warm-up laps, and then they’ll watch the race – around 30 women racing on the first day and 50 in the men’s race. Then there’ll be a medal presentation and everyone will go home. You’re unlikely to see Julien Absalon in the pub that night… But this is us coming to the event as mountain bike fans. For the general public, the mountain biking gives many people the opportunity to get really close to the action and to see the best athletes in the world racing close up. You’ll be able to see them up close, hear their breath rasp, get sprayed in snot and energy drink. Even if you stay in one spot, the racers will come past eight or nine times and if you move around, you’ll be able to see them several times a lap. At the end of it, the winner will get an Olympic gold medal. From that point of view, it’s going to be pretty exciting. Quite what everyone will do for the rest of the day, we’re not sure – but I guess that, in the athletics, there probably isn’t a running shoe expo, or a swim-goggle exhibition in the swimming…
Overall, I’m very excited about the venue. I went along in full sceptic mode and I came away very impressed with the technical nature of the course, with the climbs and the descents and with the overall spectacle of the venue. There are a few things that I’ll hold fire on just yet until more details emerge, such as things like if there’ll be tech zones (or bouncy castles) but at the moment, it’s all looking good.
Looking good! (some of the comments are missing from under the pix)
I’ll get on to that…
That course sums up UK mountain biking pretty well I think.
Sorted Chipps
It do look good. Care to expand on that doof?
I think it’s going to be ace. Can’t wait to ride it once it’s open to the great unwashed!
Question is, once the games are over and done with, is it going to be left so we can all go and play on it,
Well, it’s not really representative of the sport I do, but then I do also acknowledge the difficulties of hosting an event like this.
I can’t help but think it’s a shame that when our sport will get the most TV viewers, this is the view of it they get. Mind you, that’s the XC competition world in general’s fault, not just the Olympics.
No mention of the Crap Coe spouted about increasing the popularity of MTB as a gateway to getting kids into road and track cycling (I admit I didn’t read closely, just scanned and looked at the pictures)? I’m not saying it might not be true to a certain extent, but I thought it showed a lack of respect for a sport that is fairly popular and has some world-class British competitors.
Will be a good trail centre afterwards and it’s already got a good tea room 🙂 Hope they can come to some arrangement for the 10 years after.
There is some good scope in there by the looks of it. And not too far away from me in just as hilly Suffolk!
what Coe said was very true though, a fair few pros start as mtbers and go to the road to make some money.
as most people here do mountain biking as a pass-time not as a sport. XC racing is not stopping for a chat half way up the first climb at cwm carn.
Test Event, eh? I’ll get our team to sign up for that 🙂 Looks swoopy and fast, although 70m between the highest and lowest point is interesting… what does that equate to in total height gained during a lap? bristol was awesome at 13km and 180m.. super fast, and that’d have made a great course.
More importantly what cake was served!
At least Chipps has made the whole thing sound a bit more exciting than the guys did over at bikeradar.com.
Lets face it, we’re all committed mountain bikers and we can all claim to know somewhere better than what has been chosen. However in reality the same guy or girl will win, wherever. The Olympics will always be a made-for-television event, and the sponsorship gained from the event will help the sport for years to come.
Let’s get British Cycling bidding for the World Championships, at least we know that’ll be on a ‘proper’ course.
Really excited about this track- it’s only across the Thames for me. Cant wait to ride it!
Hope they keep it longer than 10 years and expand the trails- they can turn it into a small trail centre maybe?
Looks good. The sailing is at PortLAND by the way, not Portsmouth. Just thought i’d let you know.
Will be lots of 29ers,on skinny tyres,with drop bars…oh yeah cyclocross.
Cross should be an Olympic sport anyway.
Chipps has made it sound exciting. Let us not forget that a xc race course should be different to your local xc loop, and with Martyn Salt in charge of the course, you’ve at least got someone there who know’s what he’s doing.
I’ll be buggered if I’m paying £45 to watch some blokes with no leg-hair ride a lot quicker than I can.
Should of gone to Swinley.
I was trying to work out what that reminded me of, I’ve worked it out now – the canal tow path they’ve just put in Woking.
http://www.cyclewoking.org.uk/images/instances/00004B6E0FEB.C0A801BA.0000679F.0014.jpg
See? FFS.
Well the pics and course description put quite a lot of my initial fears to rest. Looks like it could be a good XC race venue (Martyn Salt being involved is very very good news) If the course can be left in place as a proper legacy after the Olympics then thats good news too as this part of Essex is pretty limited for mountain biking at the moment.