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Sailing Academy Debut For Olympic Hopefuls

The UK’s best youth sailors and aspiring London 2012 Olympians will compete for the title of Youth National Champion and for selection to Great Britain’s Youth World Championship Team, at the Weymouth and Portland National Sailing Academy (WPNSA) 10-14 April 2006. HRH Princess Anne, President of the RYA, will visit the event on Tuesday 11 April to watch Britain’s future Olympians compete.

Held at the sailing venue for the London 2012 Olympic Games, this will be the first time our young Olympic hopefuls will compete in the RYA Youth National Championships and Trials since the Weymouth waters were named home to the London 2012 Olympic Games.

Bargain View For Sale

The Daily Mirror recently ran a story on a seemingly drab property for sale, but this is one with a rather exclusive view of the 2012 sailing events….

Quote from mirror.co.uk
YOU can’t sleep in it, there’s no running water or power but this one room cliff-top hut is on sale for £60,000 - because it will have stunning views of the 2012 Olympic sailing events. Standing above Portland Harbour in Dorset, it overlooks the venue for 126 sailing races.

Henri-Lloyd Weymouth Open For Business

Weymouth has joined the ranks of Cowes, Lymington and other recognised sailing venues worldwide to host its own Henri Lloyd store to be opened on the 28th Feb 2006.

Identified as the centre for the sailing regatta during the 2012 olympic sailing events, Henri Lloyd commercial director stated: “We are thrilled to be opening our latest Henri Lloyd Sailing Store in Weymouth - it puts us at the heart of a vibrant sailing community and reinforces our brand heritage”.

“We recognise that Weymouth is a very important place for Henri Lloyd to be, the 2012 Summer Games will really put the town and surrounding area at the centre of international sailing”.

In addition to the store Henri Lloyd have also agreed to be the main sponsor of the 2006 Weymouth Town Regatta (held August 11-13) involving all local sailing clubs.

Going For Gold

Adapted from a Telegraph article:

Its always been a sore point for the residents of Weymouth that, although their coastline is infinitely more beautiful than Bournemouth, and their town is prettier than Poole’s, of the three major Dorset seaside towns, Weymouth has been the ugly duckling.

Bournemouth has boomed in recent years, shaking off its elderly image, attracting young professionals with its university lifestyle and glamourous nightlife. Poole, with upmarket suburbs like Sandbanks, has become a jet-setter’s paradise, with outrageously flamboyant millionaires’ houses and posh eateries springing up along its pine-clad coastline.

Weymouth, despite her beautiful Georgian architecture and stunning shoreline - was only really appreciated by the locals, a few sailors and the bucket-and-spaders who poured into town every August. Her strange and virtually treeless twin, the promontory of Portland, was even less appreciated, known only for her three prisons, the decomissioned naval base and stone quarries.

But now this under-valued pair are to have their time in the spotlight with the 2012 Olympic sailing events based off the Weymouth coast. In the weeks following the announcement that London is to host the 2012 Olympics, changes have already been taking place. The borough council has won funding to apply for lottery money to revamp the once elegant Georgian Esplanade, famous for its ice-cream parlours, chip shops and amusement arcades - and it’s a fairly safe bet that the money will be granted.

The relief road from Dorchester that has been over 10 years in the planning, and always pushed to the back of the agenda, is set to be fast-tracked and developers are moving in on the derelict naval base accommodation blocks on Portland to turn them into luxury flats, with some fabulous sea views of the coast and overlooking the sailing academy.

Local estate agents can barely contain their excitement. Tales abound of vendors upping their prices by £10,000 overnight, speculators buying up modest cottages on Portland and shrewd investors putting deposits on new harbourside apartments without even seeing them all circulating the airwaves.

The general view of locals is one of cautious optimism, and a hope that the nightmare of traffic congestion they have experienced for years will be over when the relief road gets built.

Many locals, mind you, say that Weymouth’s journey of upward mobility began years before the Olympic announcement - and worry that young families will be priced out of a booming property market. “The change really started with the closure of the naval base in 1997, and the closure two years later of the Royal Naval Air Station,” says Stuart Morris, Portland resident and local historian. “Portland had for years been seen as a dumping ground for social problems and the housing was not considered up to much.”

A sure sign of where Portland is headed is that the abandoned naval accommodation blocks, once earmarked as an immigrant reception centre, are now to be converted into a 550-unit residential scheme - of which most of the apartments will command spectacular views of the sailing events.

Weymouth too, in recent years, has been much improved, particularly with the new 250-berth marina. The Pavilion Theatre area of the sea-front, for years rather shabby and hosting shows starring the likes of Jim Davidson and Bobby Davro for the delectation of the bucket-and-spade brigade - is getting a facelift, with upmarket shops, restaurants and flats in the pipeline. “Café society is coming to Weymouth,” says an excited Mark Baker.

One sure sign that things are on the up is that the quality of the local restaurants has been improving. Michael Clough, chef and patron of the Roundhouse Restaurant, once had little competition for his clients who come to eat his hand-dived scallops, Weymouth Bay crab and mushroom parcels and his famous, hand-made chocolate ice-cream baskets.

Amid all this excitement, however, the council has not forgotten its native residents, who, as in other upwardly mobile areas of the South-West are in danger of being priced out of their home town as the speculators, buy-to-letters and second-home owners move in.

Developers will have to provide a minimum of 30 per cent affordable housing in their schemes, says Jacqui Gisborne, marketing and press officer for Weymouth and Portland Borough Council.

“Although we live in this stunning area, we don’t have the stunning salaries to match,” she says. “People living here often like to strike the right balance between work and family life and can’t afford huge mortgages. Our planning department is really very fixed on ensuring that locals with modest incomes aren’t forced to leave their community.

Weymouth Relief Road Imminent

Thanks in part to the successful bid to host the 2012 olympics, it now looks like Weymouth & Portland council’s long awaited relief road is planned to get underway, to be completed by 2010. Proposals for the relief road which will be submitted to the public for opinion is expected in the Autumn.

dorsetforyou.com states:
This autumn, Dorset County Council will unveil a planning application for the project - a brand new 6km alternative route for the A354 from Dorchester to Weymouth.
With the road network no longer able to cope with growing population numbers, souring tourist popularity and modern business needs, the £55 million scheme is essential to help solve the area’s traffic problems.

Weymouth & Portland to Host 2012 Olympic Sailing Events!

Its official, England’s bid to host the 2012 olympic games has been voted by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to be the host to the games.
The voting took place in Singapore on the 6th July 2005 and London’s bid pipped Paris to the post by just four votes, receiving 54 of the 104 available following previous rounds eliminating Madrid, New York & Moscow from the vote, the announcement came at 12:49pm local time. London bid leader Lord Coe said “Everyone was all together and we never lost our confidence”.

Weymouth & Portland play a key role in the games due to our world class sailing academy located at the ex-navy air base between on Portland.

Councilor Lynee Herbert spoke after the announcement:
“We are truly thrilled at the decision. The prospect of hosting the Olympic sailing events is hugely exciting for Weymouth and Portland , it will have a fantastically positive effect on the borough, trigger substantial and lasting economic gains and will leave a fabulous legacy. The support from local businesses, organisations, individuals, schools and colleges, local dignitaries and the media has been impressive to say the least. All those involved in supporting the bid should be congratulated, their efforts have been rewarded and they have a lot to feel proud of today!”

So tomorrow the work begins and the purpose of this site is to represent a timeline to which you can see our seaside towns transformation into a venue fit for the olympics!

2012 Olympic Host Announcement Tomorrow

Tomorrow in Singapore, the International Olympic Committee will announce the host venue for the 2012 Olympic games, the competing venues in the final round of voting are:

-London
-Paris
-Madrid
-New York
-Moscow

With the announcement due at around 12:30pm local time its sure to have the whole country biting their fingernails, see you there!