London 2012 has already cost the capital a
little over £12 million in public taxes, and over £32 million overall. Although,
the original budget was a little over £9 million.
But the mascot sculptures, of Wenlock (the Olympic mascot) and Mandeville
(the Paralympic mascot) have been
scattered around the city in walking and travel hotspots.
Each fibre class creature will weigh one
tonne and reach 2.3 metres perched on concrete plinths. They have been created
and decorated by over 20 artists and sculptors and are situated in colour-coded
walking routes including Mayfair, Hyde
Park and the South Bank.
Over four million trail maps will be handed
out by volunteers to tourist for the sculptures and £490,000 has been spent on
the project so far. The mascots were originally imagined by acclaimed children’s
author Michael Morourgo. They are
based around the idea that the two characters are the lost drops of steel from
the construction workers’ efforts to build the Olympic Stadium.
Wenlock
is named after the Shropshire town of Much
Wenlock, which first hosted the 'Wenlock
Olympian Games' in the 1850s. Mandeville,
however, is named after the location where the Paralympic movement was founded after World War II.
Speaking
before the mascots were revealed, London
2012 chairman Lord Coe told the BBC Today programme: “We want it to be fun,
we want it to try and engage and reconnect young people to sport and that
should be fun, teach them to play sport and anchor it in our extraordinary Olympic
and Paralympic history.”
Mayor: Boris Johnson |
Mandeville and Wenlock sculptures will be auctioned after the Games with all proceeds going to charity chosen by the Mayor of London. Boris Johnson said “Wenlock
and Mandeville are eminently suitable guides for Londoners and tourists wanting
to discover the city.”
When the mascots were first unveiled to the
public back in 2007, they were disliked by the majority of the public. But now
their comments are a lot more positive. Luke Boucher, 27, from Marble Arch
described the mascot trail as a “daring project” and Luke Boucher, 27, also
from Marble Arch said "They
look like robots from a Japanese manga cartoon, but I think people will enjoy
that. Personally I think they are really cool, and tourists come to London expecting to see something
different and exciting.”
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