Public art & sculpture · London
ArcelorMittal Orbit
ArcelorMittal Orbit in England London, United Kingdom.

Chris Downer — CC BY-SA 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons licence
Plan your visit
- Typical visit
- 1 h–2 h
- Paid entry
About
ArcelorMittal Orbit is a public sculpture in England London, United Kingdom, dating from 2012. Britain's public art ranges from Henry Moore reclining figures and Anthony Gormley installations to the Angel of the North and the surviving statues of empire.
Photo gallery
From the Wikipedia article
The ArcelorMittal Orbit (often referred to as the Orbit Tower or its original name, Orbit) is a 114.5-metre (376-foot) sculpture and observation tower in Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park in Stratford, London. It is Britain's largest piece of public art, and is intended to be a permanent lasting legacy of London's hosting of the 2012 Summer Olympic and Paralympic Games, assisting in the post-Olympics regeneration of the Stratford area. Sited between London Stadium (formerly called the Olympic Stadium) and the Aquatics Centre, it allows visitors to view the whole Olympic Park from two observation platforms. Orbit was designed by Turner Prize–winning artist Anish Kapoor and Cecil Balmond of Arup Group, an engineering firm. Announced on 31 March 2010, it was expected to be completed by December 2011. The project came about after Mayor of London Boris Johnson and Olympics Minister Tessa Jowell decided in 2008 that the Olympic Park needed "something extra". Designers were asked for ideas for an "Olympic tower" at least 100 metres (330 ft) high: Orbit was the unanimous choice from proposals considered by a nine-person advisory panel. Kapoor and Balmond believed that Orbit represented a radical advance in the architectural field of combining sculpture and structural engineering, and that it combined both stability and instability in a work that visitors can engage with and experience via an incorporated spiral walkway. It has been both praised and criticised for its bold design, and has especially received criticism as a vanity project of questionable lasting use or merit as a public art project. The project was expected to cost £19.1 million, with £16 million coming from Britain's then-richest man, the steel tycoon Lakshmi Mittal, Chairman of the ArcelorMittal steel company, and the balance of £3.1 million coming from the London Development Agency. The name "ArcelorMittal Orbit" combines the name of Mittal's company, as chief sponsor, with Orbit, the original working title…
Excerpt from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0. See the source article linked in Sources below.
Background
History
According to London mayor Boris Johnson, in around October 2008 he and Tessa Jowell decided that the site in Stratford, London that was to become the Olympic Park for the 2012 Olympics needed "something extra" to "distinguish the East London skyline", and "arouse the curiosity and wonder of Londoners and visitors". An image of the structure was included in the 2015 design of the British passport. The structure was re-purposed with the world's longest slide in 2016, as a way to attract more visitors.
Sourced from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0.
- Coordinates
- 51.5383, -0.0133
- Address
- Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park<br />London, {{postcode|E|20}}<br />United Kingdom
- Phone
- +44 333 800 8099
- Established
- 2012
- Official site
- web.archive.org
Sources
- wikidata: Q631871 (CC0)
- wikipedia: ArcelorMittal Orbit (CC BY-SA 4.0)
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Frequently asked questions
- Where is ArcelorMittal Orbit?
- ArcelorMittal Orbit is in London, United Kingdom.
- When was ArcelorMittal Orbit built?
- Built or established in 2012.
- Who owns ArcelorMittal Orbit?
- ArcelorMittal Orbit is owned by Olympic Park Legacy Company (on completion), ownership transferred to London Legacy Development Corporation.