London Wikimania Bid: Difference between revisions

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(→‎In a nutshell: removed Olympic village)
(→‎Introduction: Added introduction (to replace Vision) and cleaned up committee list.)
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== Introduction ==
== Introduction ==
Here’s a sad reality:
'''Your average person in the street doesn’t even know that the Wikipedia community exists.'''
They probably know it's a website. If you're lucky, they'll even know that anyone can edit it. But most people don't realise there's an enormous, active and sociable community bubbling away beneath the surface, striving to keep the most loved encyclopedia in the world to the highest possible standard, day in and day out.
'''We believe Wikimania can change all that.'''
In London, we have the opportunity to hold a Wikimania unlike any before. We're proposing:
*an ambitious program with the highest attendance yet - over 1,000 Wikimedians
*heavy outreach to the GLAM and technology sectors in a city that is an international leader for culture and tech
*a 4 day programme of world-class, A-list speakers whose presentations will be recorded and spread across the Internet
*an outreach day for the public that will educate hundreds of locals.
The organising committee is half longtime wikipedia editors and half individuals with significant experience running large events and fundraising in London. Unlike many of the past host locations, London has dozens of potential venues that can easily host a 1000+ person conference. It also offers unparalleled access to high quality speakers, fundraising opportunities and the international media.
We hope to make Wikimania a world recognised brand like TED or the World Economic Forum - and along with it, Wikipedia will be recognised worldwide as a community that has achieved something remarkable, a community that is going to continue to change the world, and most importantly of all, a community that anybody can join.
=== Our city ===
=== Our city ===
'''London''' is the capital city of England and the United Kingdom, the largest metropolitan area in the United Kingdom, and the largest urban zone in the [[Wikipedia:European Union|European Union]] by most measures.<ref>According to the [[wikipedia:Eurostat|European Statistical Agency]], London is the largest [[wikipedia:Larger Urban Zones|Larger Urban Zone]].</ref> Located on the River Thames, London has been a major settlement for two millennia, [[wikipedia:History of London|its history]] going back to its founding by the [[wikipedia:Roman Empire|Romans]], who called it ''[[wikipedia:Roman London|Londinium]]''.<ref>[http://classic-web.archive.org/web/20080622181424/http://www.museumoflondon.org.uk/English/EventsExhibitions/Permanent/RomanLondon.htm Roman London]</ref>  London's ancient core, the [[wikipedia:City of London|City of London]], largely retains its square-mile [[wikipedia:mediaeval|mediaeval]] boundaries.  
'''London''' is the capital city of England and the United Kingdom, the largest metropolitan area in the United Kingdom, and the largest urban zone in the [[Wikipedia:European Union|European Union]] by most measures.


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The Wikimedia community is most active in and around London. The community is tight-knit, and the regular London meetups often attract a good turnout, including Wikipedians from a wide array of on-wiki and off-wiki backgrounds. These meetups are among the most regular and the longest-running Wikimedia meetups in the world (our [[meta:Meetup/London/50|fiftieth]] was in October 2011) and are an excellent venue for discussing grand ideas like this one. The [[meta:Meetup/London/51|fifty-first London meetup]], held in November 2011, was attended by Sue Gardner and several other members of Foundation staff, after which Sue went on to give a talk at Imperial College London.
The Wikimedia community is most active in and around London. The community is tight-knit, and the regular London meetups often attract a good turnout, including Wikipedians from a wide array of on-wiki and off-wiki backgrounds. These meetups are among the most regular and the longest-running Wikimedia meetups in the world (our [[meta:Meetup/London/50|fiftieth]] was in October 2011) and are an excellent venue for discussing grand ideas like this one. The [[meta:Meetup/London/51|fifty-first London meetup]], held in November 2011, was attended by Sue Gardner and several other members of Foundation staff, after which Sue went on to give a talk at Imperial College London.
The United Kingdom has yet to hold a Wikimania, although a bid was previously submitted for Oxford. We would like to make Wikimania 2013 the biggest and the best Wikimania ever, and when considering the agreements and support outlined on this page, London is uniquely placed to make it happen.


=== Our team ===
=== Our team ===
{|class="wikitable"
{|class="wikitable"
!Name
!Name
!Areas of responsibility
!Responsibility
!Experience/Comments
!Experience/Comments
|-
|-
|'''{{w|User:Panyd|Panyd}}'''
|'''{{w|User:Panyd|Panyd}}'''
|Bid coordinator
|Bid Coordinator
|Hello! I am an administrator on the English Wikipedia.
|Hello! I am an administrator on the English Wikipedia.
|-
|-
|colspan=3|
|'''{{w|User:HJ Mitchell|Harry Mitchell}}'''
|Asst Bid Coordinator
|English Wikipedia admin, some small-scale event-management experience, can handle some of the logistics, will most likely have attended Wikimania 2012 and some smaller Wikimedia conferences by 2013.
|-
|-
|'''{{w|User:Marek69|Marek69}}'''
|'''{{w|User:Marek69|Marek69}}'''
|
|Community Coordinator
|I am an editor on the English Wikipedia. I have attended Wikimania in 2010 and 2011.
|I am an editor on the English Wikipedia. I have attended Wikimania in 2010 and 2011.
|-
|colspan=3|
|-
|'''{{w|User:HJ Mitchell|Harry Mitchell}}'''
|Nominal Deputy Coordinator
|English Wikipedia admin, some small-scale event-management experience, can handle some of the logistics, will most likely have attended Wikimania 2012 and some smaller Wikimedia conferences by 2013.
|-
|colspan=3|
|-
|-
|'''{{w|User:EdSaperia|Ed Saperia}}'''
|'''{{w|User:EdSaperia|Ed Saperia}}'''
|
|Event Coordinator
|I have many years of event experience and a great many useful London contacts and resources. Jimmy entrusted me to organise the London VIP Wikipedia 10th Birthday party.
|I have many years of event experience and a great many useful London contacts and resources. Jimmy entrusted me to organise the London VIP Wikipedia 10th Birthday party.
|-
|-
|colspan=3|
|'''{{w|Anastasia Andrianova}}'''
|Corporate Sponsorship
|
|-
|-
|'''{{w|User:Mike Peel|Mike Peel}}'''
|'''{{w|User:Mike Peel|Mike Peel}}'''
|  
|  
|
|
|-
|colspan=3|
|-
|-
|'''{{w|User:Chase me ladies, I'm the Cavalry|Chase me ladies, I'm the Cavalry}}'''
|'''{{w|User:Chase me ladies, I'm the Cavalry|Chase me ladies, I'm the Cavalry}}'''
|
|
| Where not constrained by conflicts of interest
|Where not constrained by conflicts of interest
|-
|colspan=3|
|-
|-
|'''[[User:Rock drum|Rock drum]]'''
|'''[[User:Rock drum|Rock drum]]'''
|General help
|General help
|English Wikipedia editor of 2+ years and editor of ''[[outreach:GLAM/Newsletter|This Month in GLAM]]''. Organised small-scale, local events before. Languages: en-N, de-1, es-1.
|English Wikipedia editor of 2+ years and editor of ''[[outreach:GLAM/Newsletter|This Month in GLAM]]''. Organised small-scale, local events before. Languages: en-N, de-1, es-1.
|-
|colspan=3|
|-
|-
|'''{{w|James Knight}}'''
|'''{{w|James Knight}}'''

Revision as of 20:08, 2 January 2012

File:Wikimania 2013 banner skyline 2.png


London collage.jpg
The London Olympic village in June 2011 (while under construction).

Introduction

Here’s a sad reality: Your average person in the street doesn’t even know that the Wikipedia community exists.

They probably know it's a website. If you're lucky, they'll even know that anyone can edit it. But most people don't realise there's an enormous, active and sociable community bubbling away beneath the surface, striving to keep the most loved encyclopedia in the world to the highest possible standard, day in and day out.

We believe Wikimania can change all that.

In London, we have the opportunity to hold a Wikimania unlike any before. We're proposing:

  • an ambitious program with the highest attendance yet - over 1,000 Wikimedians
  • heavy outreach to the GLAM and technology sectors in a city that is an international leader for culture and tech
  • a 4 day programme of world-class, A-list speakers whose presentations will be recorded and spread across the Internet
  • an outreach day for the public that will educate hundreds of locals.

The organising committee is half longtime wikipedia editors and half individuals with significant experience running large events and fundraising in London. Unlike many of the past host locations, London has dozens of potential venues that can easily host a 1000+ person conference. It also offers unparalleled access to high quality speakers, fundraising opportunities and the international media.

We hope to make Wikimania a world recognised brand like TED or the World Economic Forum - and along with it, Wikipedia will be recognised worldwide as a community that has achieved something remarkable, a community that is going to continue to change the world, and most importantly of all, a community that anybody can join.

Our city

London is the capital city of England and the United Kingdom, the largest metropolitan area in the United Kingdom, and the largest urban zone in the European Union by most measures.

London is a leading global city, with strengths in the arts, commerce, education, entertainment, fashion, finance, healthcare, media, professional services, research and development, tourism and transport all contributing to its prominence.[1] It is the world's largest financial centre alongside New York City[2][3][4] and has the fifth-largest city GDP in the world (and the largest in Europe).[5] It has the most international visitors of any city in the world[6] and London Heathrow is the world's busiest airport.[7] London's 43 universities form the largest concentration of higher education in Europe.[8] In 2012 London will become the first city to host the modern Summer Olympic Games three times.[9]

Our community

The United Kingdom is home to one of the largest Wikimedia communities in the world. The local chapter, Wikimedia UK, which has recently been granted registered charity status, is one of the larger and more experienced Wikimedia chapters. It has supported a wide array of events in the United Kingdom, and has a strong track record of productive collaborations with cultural institutions such as galleries, libraries, archives, and museums (GLAM) as well as in broader outreach and educational projects.

In 2011, Wikimedia UK supported events at the British Museum and the British Library in London, and collaborations with the Victoria and Albert Museum and The National Archives are in the works. Outside the capital, events have also been held in Bristol, Coventry, Derby, Manchester, Brighton, Cambridge and Liverpool, as well as Scotland. The chapter has an ambitious schedule of events lined up for 2012 and beyond, including smaller conferences and an OTRS workshop in addition to more GLAM and outreach events.

The Wikimedia community is most active in and around London. The community is tight-knit, and the regular London meetups often attract a good turnout, including Wikipedians from a wide array of on-wiki and off-wiki backgrounds. These meetups are among the most regular and the longest-running Wikimedia meetups in the world (our fiftieth was in October 2011) and are an excellent venue for discussing grand ideas like this one. The fifty-first London meetup, held in November 2011, was attended by Sue Gardner and several other members of Foundation staff, after which Sue went on to give a talk at Imperial College London.

Our team

Name Responsibility Experience/Comments
Panyd Bid Coordinator Hello! I am an administrator on the English Wikipedia.
Harry Mitchell Asst Bid Coordinator English Wikipedia admin, some small-scale event-management experience, can handle some of the logistics, will most likely have attended Wikimania 2012 and some smaller Wikimedia conferences by 2013.
Marek69 Community Coordinator I am an editor on the English Wikipedia. I have attended Wikimania in 2010 and 2011.
Ed Saperia Event Coordinator I have many years of event experience and a great many useful London contacts and resources. Jimmy entrusted me to organise the London VIP Wikipedia 10th Birthday party.
Anastasia Andrianova Corporate Sponsorship
Mike Peel
Chase me ladies, I'm the Cavalry Where not constrained by conflicts of interest
Rock drum General help English Wikipedia editor of 2+ years and editor of This Month in GLAM. Organised small-scale, local events before. Languages: en-N, de-1, es-1.
James Knight

Our Vision

Here’s a sad reality: Your average person in the street doesn’t even know that the Wikipedia community exists.

They probably know it's a website. If you're lucky, they'll even know that anyone can edit it. But most people don't realise there's an enormous, active and sociable community bubbling away beneath the surface, striving to keep the most loved encyclopedia in the world to the highest possible standard, day in and day out.

We believe Wikimania can change all that. We're proposing an ambitious program with the highest attendance yet—over 1,000 Wikimedians; heavy outreach to the GLAM and technology sectors in a city that is an international leader for culture and tech; world-class, A-list speakers whose presentations will be recorded and spread across the Internet; an outreach day for the public that will educate hundreds of locals.

We hope to make Wikimania a world recognised brand like TED or the World Economic Forum - and along with it, Wikipedia will be recognised worldwide as a community that has achieved something remarkable, a community that is going to continue to change the world, and most importantly of all, a community that anybody can join.

Visitor's London


  • London has 17 national museums across the city.
  • There are approximately 6,100 licensed restaurants in London - 22% of the restaurants in the whole of Great Britain. This includes 36 Michelin star rated restaurants and covers over 50 major country cuisines.
  • London is a city of green open spaces. In total, it comes to 30% of the London area, including 147 parks and gardens and eight royal parks, including Hyde Park and Regents Park.
  • London has 3800 pubs and 233 nightclubs. Many venues are open after midnight.
  • You will often hear London described as a collection of villages. Local shops, markets, parks, and leisure venues foster a feeling of local community within a conurbation of seven million people. Some areas have a particularly strong identities and associations making London a world in one city and gives London the largest non-white population of any European city.

Conference

Venue

A short list of venues we are considering

(We also have other possible venue which we're busy following up and discussing with our sponsors)



Special events

Parties

Wikimania traditionally hosts two parties, one for attendees (capacity of 450-500) and one for sponsors and VIPs (capacity 100). We would like to hold a third event for chapter heads to discuss issues relevant to them.

  • Attendees party(ies) propositions
(location, how to get there, what's cool and relaxed about it)
  • Sponsor party(ies) proposition
(location, how to get there, what's chic and high profile about it)
  • Chapter Head dinner proposition
(location, how to get there, what's chic and high profile about it)

Logistics

Accomodation

Olympic Village

Hotels

The Olympic village has many hotels on site with 17,320 beds in total. There are a wide variety of buildings from luxury to budget.

Hostels

Getting to the United Kingdom

Big Ben is in the Clock Tower

International travel to the United Kingdom is extensive. Access to the UK is provided by 30 international airports providing travel to 200 destinations, 8 ports with international passenger ferry services to Europe, and a rail link to mainland Europe via the Channel Tunnel.

Train (via Belgium and France)

Eurostar high-speed trains run between London (St Pancras International), Ebbsfleet and Ashford through the Channel Tunnel to Paris (Gare du Nord), Lille and Brussels. During the summer an additional weekly train operates to Avignon and during the winter a weekly service runs a ski service direct to the French Alps. Through tickets and connections are available in Lille, Paris and Brussels from many European cities to most large UK cities.

Journey times average two hours fifteen minutes to and from Paris, and one hour fifty minutes to Brussels. A second class return from Paris to London costs between €85 and €230. While it can be cheaper to fly from London to Paris using a low-cost airline, bear in mind that the journeys to the airports can be expensive and time-consuming.

Ferry

Ferries run from Calais to Dover on a regular basis and a return ticket costs around £40. Journey times average at around an hour and a half. However, there are many other ports in the UK as well and travellers can access British ports from at least seven surrounding countries. Due to the relatively small size of Britain, it is not infeasible for someone to make the journey from their country to London within 24 hours.

It may be cheaper to fly on a low-budget airline but for the sightseer there are a variety of ways to travel into the country.

Air

  • London Heathrow Airport - The busiest airport in the United Kingdom and one of the busiest in the world (depending on measure). LHR serves a vast array of destinations, including long-haul services to Asia, North America, Oceania, the Middle East. For more information on destinations that can be reached from LHR, please see Heathrow Airport: airlines and destinations. The airport is on the edge of Greater London and can be reached by the fast Heathrow Express service, the semi-fast Heathrow Connect to Paddington then via London Underground to Stratford or the slower but cheaper London Underground all the way.
  • London Gatwick Airport - 30 miles outside of London, Gatwick serves fewer destinations but still has an extremely regular train service into Central London, with a mix of Thameslink services which call at several stations in London (including London Bridge, where attendees can change to the Jubilee Line of the London Underground for the final leg to Stratford); local services to London Victoria; and express services, which also terminate at Victoria. For a list of destinations served by Gatwick, please see Gatwick Airport: airlines and destinations
  • London City Airport - The smallest of London's three main airports, but the closest to the conference area, requiring only a short DLR journey to Stratford (Under construction but due to open before the Olympics in 2012). London City Airport's destinations can be found at City Airport: airlines and destinations
  • London Luton Airport - Budget airline hub to the north of London; mostly serves destinations in Europe. Regular train service to London St Pancras.
  • London Stansted Airport - Also a budget airline hub, also predominantly serves Europe. Direct rail and coach connection to Stratford.

Travel costs

With many budget airlines and flag carriers flying in to London, flights are relatively cheap from most of the world.
The City of London is one of the world's largest financial centres alongside New York City.
From Costs
Europe
Icons-flag-nl.png Amsterdam £64
Icons-flag-gr.png Athens £128
Icons-flag-ie.png Dublin £33
Icons-flag-de.png Frankfurt £56
Icons-flag-tr.png Istanbul £82
Icons-flag-pt.png Lisbon £70
Icons-flag-es.png Madrid £72
Icons-flag-ru.png Moscow £139
Icons-flag-no.png Oslo £59
Icons-flag-fr.png Paris £49
Icons-flag-is.png Reykjavik £257
Icons-flag-it.png Rome £87
Icons-flag-at.png Vienna £59
Icons-flag-pl.png Warsaw £79
From Costs
North America
Icons-flag-us.png Atlanta £431
Icons-flag-us.png Chicago £507 (indirect)
Icons-flag-us.png Houston £556
Icons-flag-us.png Los Angeles £550 (indirect)
Icons-flag-mx.png Mexico City £732 (indirect)
Icons-flag-us.png Miami £411
Icons-flag-us.png New York £431
Icons-flag-us.png San Francisco £540
Icons-flag-ca.png Toronto £466
Icons-flag-ca.png Vancouver £625
South America
Icons-flag-co.png Bogotá £813 (indirect)
Icons-flag-ar.png Buenos Aires £683 (indirect)
Icons-flag-ve.png Caracas £685 (indirect)
Icons-flag-br.png Rio de Janeiro £550 (indirect)
Icons-flag-cl.png Santiago £853 (indirect)
From Costs
Oceania
Icons-flag-au.png Melbourne £849 (indirect)
Icons-flag-au.png Sydney £805 (indirect)
Icons-flag-nz.png Auckland £798 (indirect)
Africa
Icons-flag-eg.png Cairo £298
Icons-flag-za.png Johannesburg £372 (indirect)
Icons-flag-ke.png Nairobi £380 (indirect)
Asia
Icons-flag-th.png Bangkok £533 (indirect)
Icons-flag-in.png Delhi £403 (indirect)
Icons-flag-hk.png Hong Kong £538 (indirect)
Icons-flag-id.png Jakarta £564 (indirect)
Icons-flag-kr.png Seoul £593 (indirect)
Icons-flag-sg.png Singapore £499 (indirect)
Icons-flag-tw.png Taipei £773 (indirect)
Icons-flag-il.png Tel Aviv £189
Icons-flag-jp.png Tokyo £598 (indirect)


The prices listed include all taxes and duties and are for a return flight to London leaving the city on Wednesday 11th July 2012, and returning Monday 16th July 2012 [10][11]

Visa issues


EU member states
Special visa-free provisions (Schengen treaty, EEA, OCT or other)
Visa-free access to the UK for 6 months
Visa required to enter the UK, transit without visa
Visa required to enter the UK and for transit through the UK
Visa-status unknown



The United Kingdom is a member country of the European Union. This means that all citizens of EU member states with a valid travel document (passport or European ID card) are allowed to travel freely within the European Union (including the UK) for up to 3 months.

Given the high throughput of air traffic, the UK is a highly accessible country with those travelling from within the EU, North America, Japan, South Africa, Australasia or most of Latin America not requiring a visa to visit the UK.

Many people from other regions will also be able to visit the UK without a visa. To determine whether you will need a visa to visit the UK, go to www.ukvisas.gov.uk. The nature of any visa required will depend on your nationality and your current country of residence. The typical cost for a VISA for a short visit to the UK is £76.[12] Wikimedia UK may be able to act as a sponsor for those that require one in order to get a visa.

The following individuals can enter the United Kingdom without a visa:

As of right

All the countries below have visa-free access to the EU for at least 90 days.

30 St Mary Axe, also known as the Gherkin
Icons-flag-ad.png Andorra
Icons-flag-ar.png Argentina
Icons-flag-au.png Australia
Icons-flag-at.png Austria*
Icons-flag-bs.png Bahamas
Icons-flag-be.png Belgium*
Icons-flag-br.png Brazil
Icons-flag-bg.png Bulgaria*
Icons-flag-ca.png Canada
Icons-flag-cl.png Chile
Icons-flag-cr.png Costa Rica
Icons-flag-hr.png Croatia
Icons-flag-cy.png Cyprus*
Icons-flag-cz.png Czech Republic*
Icons-flag-dk.png Denmark*
Icons-flag-sv.png El Salvador
Icons-flag-ee.png Estonia*
Icons-flag-fi.png Finland*
Icons-flag-fr.png France*
Icons-flag-de.png Germany*
Icons-flag-gr.png Greece*
Icons-flag-gt.png Guatemala
Icons-flag-hn.png Honduras
Icons-flag-hu.png Hungary*
Icons-flag-ie.png Ireland*
Icons-flag-il.png Israel
Icons-flag-it.png Italy*
Icons-flag-jp.png Japan
Icons-flag-lv.png Latvia*
Icons-flag-li.png Liechtenstein
Icons-flag-lt.png Lithuania*
Icons-flag-lu.png Luxembourg*
Icons-flag-mk.png Macedonia
Icons-flag-my.png Malaysia
Icons-flag-mt.png Malta*
Icons-flag-mx.png Mexico
Icons-flag-mc.png Monaco
Icons-flag-nl.png Netherlands*
Icons-flag-nz.png New Zealand
Icons-flag-ni.png Nicaragua
Icons-flag-no.png Norway
Icons-flag-pa.png Panama
Icons-flag-py.png Paraguay
Icons-flag-pl.png Poland*
Icons-flag-pt.png Portugal*
Icons-flag-ro.png Romania*
Icons-flag-sm.png San Marino
Icons-flag-sg.png Singapore
Icons-flag-sk.png Slovakia*
Icons-flag-si.png Slovenia*
Icons-flag-kr.png Republic of Korea
Icons-flag-es.png Spain*
Icons-flag-se.png Sweden*
Icons-flag-ch.png Switzerland
Icons-flag-gb.png United Kingdom*
Icons-flag-us.png United States
Icons-flag-uy.png Uruguay
Icons-flag-va.png Vatican City State
Icons-flag-ve.png Venezuela

* - European Union member states

Getting to London

Bus

  • National Express operate coach services from Victoria Coach Station and other points to destinations across the UK. The company operates direct services to Stratford station from Cambridge and Stansted Airport. Through their Eurolines subsidiary they also run coach services to London from destinations across Europe. [1] Many other companies run coach services to London from other European cities.
  • Stratford station is a major bus hub, and is served by routes 25, 69, 86, 104, 108, 158, 238, 241, 257, 262, 276, 308, 425, 473, 678, D8, N8 and N86.
  • London Bus routes 97 and 339 stop in Stratford itself but not at the station.

Tube

  • Heathrow Airport has a direct connection to the Piccadilly Line of the London Underground, which is considerably slower but considerably cheaper than the Heathrow Express (see below). Passengers will need to change to the Central Line at Holborn, which will take them to Stratford.
  • All but one of Central London's rail termini have a direct connection to the London Underground. Different stations are on different lines, but all lines intersect, and Stratford can be reached from every inner-London Tube station without needing to change more than once.
  • Although not part of the London Underground network, the Docklands Light Railway (DLR) and London Overground are both marked on the Tube Map and both serve Stratford Regional station.
  • The Tube Map provides a colour-coded schematic of the London Underground, London Overground, and DLR networks. Copies are available for free at every Tube station and most Tourist Information Centres in London, as well as on the Transport for London website.

Train

  • Stratford has two railway stations, Stratford International and Stratford Regional (known as such to prevent confusion between the international station 400 yards away and with Stratford-upon-Avon, but officially designated "Straford"). Stratford International is served by high-speed services from London St Pancras (journey time ~10 minutes) and from towns to the south-east of London; ironically it does not currently have an international train service at present, but the government are discussing the possibility of Eurostar services between ST Pancras and Belgium/France stopping at Stratford International after the 2012 Olympics. Services operate from Stratford Regional into Central London and parts of Essex and the Home Counties including an hourly direct service to Stansted Airport. Stratford is also served by London Overground services towards Clapham Junction, London Underground Services on the Central Line as well as serving as the terminus of the London Underground Jubilee Line and the Docklands Light Railway (both of which provide slower but cheaper methods of getting into Central London).
  • Central London has 13 terminal stations. Most passengers travelling by rail from within the UK will arrive at one of these and would be advised to change to the London Underground to complete their journey.
  • Heathrow and Gatwick airports both have dedicated express train services that run non-stop into Paddington and Victoria respectively, where passengers can change to the London Underground for the final leg to Stratford.
  • Eurostar operates high-speed services from Paris and Brussels to London St Pancras. There are proposals to add services to Stratford International station (walking distance from the venue) before Wikimania 2013.

Taxi

A more expensive option than public transport, especially for those travelling from the airports. There are companies that specialise in private hire between airports and Central London which may be cheaper, but these usually require pre-booking.

Financial

Canary Wharf is a major business and financial centre

Budget

London Wikimania Bid/Budget

Sponsorship

Sponsorship Levels

Gold

Silver

Bronze

Supporting

Confirmed Sponsors

Tech City TechCity is the government’s initiative to make London an international centre for innovation. Eric Van Der Kleij, TechCity’s CEO, has adopted Wikimania 2013 to be the flagship event of the reopening of the Olympic Village after the Olympic Games in 2012. He has pledged a free or heavily discounted venue rate, and to organise a roundtable meeting with heads of industry to help fundraise.

Potential Sponsors

Various cultural institutions with which WMUK has existing links, Visa, Google, Electronic Frontier Foundation, Mozilla, Nominet, BT or Telefonica

Miscellaneous

Currency

The pound sterling (ISO 4217: GBP), known locally as the pound (£) is the currency of the United Kingdom, divided into one hundred pence (p).
Currency exchange desks are available at all London airports, as well as at the Post Office and most banks and travel agents. Australian Dollars, Canadian Dollars, Euros, Japanese Yen, Polish Złoty, Swedish Krona and United States Dollars are all widely exchanged; other currencies are usually exchangeable at the airports. A list of the current exchange rates of these and other important currencies is below.

Credit and Debit cards from banks round the world will work in cash machines in London - check with your bank.

London is an important financial centre. Your bank may well have a branch here; many overseas banks do to serve their diaspora community here.

Exchange rates as of 1 December 2011 (http://www.xe.com/)
Currency Equivalent of GB£1 Equivalent in GB£
Icons-flag-au.png Australian Dollar A$1.53 £0.65
Icons-flag-bd.png Bangladeshi Taka 121.07 ৳ £0.0083
Icons-flag-br.png Brazilian Real R$2.82 £0.35
Icons-flag-bg.png Bulgarian Lev 2.28 лв £0.44
Icons-flag-ca.png Canadian Dollar C$1.60 £0.63
Icons-flag-kh.png Cambodian Riel ៛6345.69 £0.00016
Icons-flag-cn.png Chinese Yuan ¥10.02 £0.10
Icons-flag-dk.png Danish Krone 8.67 Dkr £0.12
Icons-flag-eg.png Egyptian Pound 9.45ج.م. £0.11
Icons-flag-eu.png Euro €1.17 £0.86
Icons-flag-hk.png Hong Kong Dollar HK$12.22 £0.082
Icons-flag-is.png Icelandic Króna 186.32 Íkr £0.0054
Icons-flag-in.png Indian Rupee ₹81.00 £0.012
Icons-flag-id.png Indonesian Rupiah Rp 14157.00 £0.000070
Icons-flag-il.png Israeli Shekel ₪5.89 £0.17
Icons-flag-jp.png Japanese Yen ¥122.31 £0.0082
Icons-flag-ke.png Kenyan Shilling KSh 141.73 £0.0071
Icons-flag-mx.png Mexican Peso Mex$21.36 £0.047
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Climate

London has a temperate oceanic climate, and interestingly receives less precipitation (with 601 mm in a year), than Rome at 834 mm, Bordeaux at 923 mm, Toulouse at 668 mm, and Naples at 1,006 mm per year.[13][14][15][16][17] Summers are warm and sometimes hot, the heat being boosted by the "Urban Heat Island Effect" making the centre of London at times 5 degrees Celsius warmer than the suburbs and outskirts. London's summer average is a comfortable 24 degrees Celsius.

Telecommunications

Panorama of London, taken from the Golden Gallery of St Paul's Cathedral

Timeline

  • Rough draft budget - December 2011
  • Venue Viewing - December 2011
  • Creation of Budget, Bid documents, venue selection, approaching potential sponsors etc - Now-January 2012
  • Start working on bid page and forming wikimedia volunteer bid team - Yesterday - We have User:EdSaperia, User:Panyd, User:HJ Mitchell, User:Marek69 and User:ErrantX working on this
  • Bidding officially opens - January 2011
  • Bidding closes and winner announced - May 2012
  • Conference - July/August 2013

Self-evaluation

Strengths of the proposed location

Camden Town High Street
  1. Openness to all
    London is a city where all nationalities, religions, and sexualities are welcome to visit without threat or worry about the possibility of 'issues' with the local population, police or security services. London is the most cosmopolitan city in the world with every nationality, culture and language represented in our schools and everyday lives, (and which also gives us the widest range of cuisine at all prices!) Similarly lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans people will find a safe and public welcome here without any risks from their public or private actions, just as there are facilities for all creeds. This is a country that welcomes and supports free speech and free expression.
  2. Ease of access
    London is the crossroads of the world. Heathrow is the busiest international airport in the world and with five international airports - each with integrated onward fast train or tube services to the Wikimania venue - and an international highspeed railway service from Europe we are probably the easiest place for people to get to no matter where they start. And that multiplicity of travel routes usually means cheaper prices from the competition, indeed our checking of flight prices has shown we are the cheapest destination from just about everywhere.
    London itself has excellent transport connections to the entire world by air, and by road and rail to the rest of the UK and to Continental Europe; the venue can be reached in less than an hour from all three of London's main airports
  3. Opportunities to learn, explore, meet and enjoy
    Coming to Wikimania is not just about sharing our thoughts and ideas about Wikimedia, Wikinews, Wikisource, Wiktionary and the other projects in every language, but also to meet other editors socially and to have a brief visit to a new place at the same time. Wikimania London 2013 will not only provide facilities 'on campus' throughout the conference for these to happen but will also encourage visitors to take in the sights, the history and culture of London and the nightlife
  4. Brand new, high profile venue
    The Olympic Village is a brand new, high-profile development with excellent facilities which are more than capable of holding the number of people we need
  5. One of the largest contributing communities to Wikipedia
    The UK is the country which contributes the third most edits to Wikipedia as a whole. (some rough statistics), making its editors the most active from a country which has not yet hosted Wikimania, as well as one of the highest contributors per capita overall.
  6. Extensive Broadcast and Print Media Base
    London is home to some of the world's biggest broadcasters and publishers. The UK's largest radio group - Gcap Media - are based at Leicester Square. Fleet Street is home to some of the oldest and most prestigious titles whilst the relatively new in comparison Canary Wharf is the UK base for many of the world's biggest FTSE100 companies as well as the Trinity Mirror publishing group.
    London is also home to a wide range of highly prestigious broadcast radio stations including Capital 95.8 (official station of the 2012 Olympics) and major UK national stations such as Virgin Radio, Talksport and Classic FM.
    The world famous BBC (British Broadcasting Corporation) is also based at numerous sites in London including Television Centre and Broadcasting House - two of the most renowned and historic media centres in the world.

Weaknesses of the proposed location

...and how to overcome those weaknesses
  1. Expense- London can be expensive city at the best of times.
    Proposed solution - Attempt to have whatever we can subsidised by our sponsors. This may mean donations in kind rather than monetary donations.
    Accommodation This could be the biggest problem. This is the heigght of the tourist season so everywhere will be expensive. There is lots of student accommodation in London but it is all let to tourists in summer so will not be available cheaply to us. See if we can get subsidised accommodation in the Olympic Village (if it hasn't all been sold off as flats by then).
    Food Stratford Westfield Shopping Mall has some fairly cheap eating places on the ground floor though they may have gone up market by 2013. Other areas nearby offer a wide range of cuisine at competitive prices. We will issue attendees with a guide (in collaboration with Travelwiki?).
    Museums and galleries and monuments State and municipal Museums and galleries are mostly free though you have to pay for the Tower of London and Westminster Abbey and for privately run commercial attractions such as Madame Tussauds and the London Dungeon and for plays, concerts and movies. We should be able to get money off vouchers for many of these to give to attendees.
  2. England is too English oriented. Only 3.1% of edits from the UK are to other languages besides English - the lowest percentage of any country [2]. Coming after Wikimania being held in Washington DC this could be a disadvantage.
    The proposed site in East London is culturally mixed with large Bengali, Turkish communities. Can we do some outreach to existing community groups in the area serving other language communities and get their support for Wikimania London?
  3. London is too big. Wikimania will be just one small event and will not get as much attention as it would in a smaller venue.
    Wikimania will be the first major event in a new conference venue in a poorer, multicultural part of London. We should have no difficulty in getting a lot of attention from the local council (The majority of the Olympic Park is in Newham)
  4. Most attendees will have to change trains or change to the London Underground to complete their journey
    The proposed venue at Stratford Olympic Park in East London is close to Stratford Station which is one of the best connected stations in London and whose connections are being further improved for the olympics to be held in 2012.
    Negotiate with London Tourism and about placing signs at Airports and Mainline stations where people will arrive, with guidance (and QRpedia codes?) on how to get to the venue. Email attendees a Tube Map and/or directions from their point of arrival in the UK to the station? Have staff/volunteers in highly visible, Wikimania-branded clothing on hand at airports/major public transport interchanges to provide directions and assistance to attendees (or to collect groups of people and take them to the venue)?
  5. The ticketing system for British public transport system (especially the trains) is baffling, even to those who use it regularly
    While it is difficult to get the cheapest train ticket (as it is for cheap flights) it is straightforward to get a ticket. We will provide info (via TravelWiki?) to help those who need the cheapest ticket to find it. Others will pay a little extra and still get here.
    Give attendees the option, when registering online, to request their tickets in advance? Have staff/volunteers on hand to give out pre-booked tickets and/or assist attendees in purchasing tickets on the day? Dedicated branded tickets/Oyster cards for attendees (would require discussion with TfL)?
  6. WiFi—the WiFi in place at the Olympic Village will not have been designed with hundreds of Wikipedians in mind. WiFi availability has been an issue at every previous Wikimania.
    This is a new facility seeking to promote itself as part of Tech City. If we are clear to them what our requirements are, they may be able to meet them. After the event, they can use the fact that it was "the first Wikimania without significant WiFi issues" as a big selling point for how well-equipped their facility is.
    If enquiries to that end give no satisfaction, we should look at hiring a company to temporarily provide enhanced WiFi.

Notes