Avizaqcua – Avis Training Centre | The true Story
Article about us on the magazine Row360
The full article:
form + function
Two hundred klicks
east of Lisbon, lies Avis. Once home to King John I, today it attracts a new
elite. Some of the world’s most decorated oarsmen and women make annual (if not
more frequent) pilgrimages to this sleepy town, nestled in the Alentejo region
of Portugal, to tune bodies and sharpen minds ahead of the biggest races of
their lives. It’s easy to see why; historically renowned for its exports of
opium and wine, Avis now offers a very different, equally intoxicating commodity
– boat speed. Jürgen Grobler brought his British heavyweight men to Avis prior
to the London Olympics, and it is here that they have put the finishing touches
on all but one of their World Championship campaigns since 2011. Two-times
Olympic gold medalist Peter Reed even found a wife here. But if it wasn't for a
pair of plucky young Portuguese guys, none of it would have ever happened.
The raw ingredients
were always there – glassy water, good weather and not a jet ski or gin palace
in sight. But it’s the Hotel Herdade Da Cortesia that has made it so
irresistible to international athletes and schoolboys alike. “Plus, it’s out in
the sticks, which keeps us out of mischief,” says Will Satch, stroke of the
British men’s eight that has taken gold at every World Championships since the
last Olympics.
In 2009, Luis Ahrens and Pedro Alte da
Veiga opened the world’s first hotel designed with the sole purpose of
providing athletes with the best possible training camp experience. A short
walk from bedroom to boat rack, to gourmet breakfast; it’s a training camp
without the compromise. Designed entirely by da Veiga, who was still working as
a full-time architect at the time, the building strikes a perfect balance
between form and function. Made for rowers, the regular guests who stay between
teams would never know. To the untrained eye, it’s a striking, four star hotel,
complete with glass-walled restaurant from which to enjoy the beautiful vista,
outside fireplace and zero edge pool. Look a little closer however, and you
start to spot the rower-friendly 210cm-tall door frames, extra high shower
heads and beds long enough to accommodate even Mo Sbihi. When it came to designing
the gym, Luis and Pedro made a trip to the state-of-the-art strength and
conditioning facilities used by the British team at Bisham Abbey and Caversham
to ensure their own would meet the needs of a world-beating heavyweight rowing
team.
The lake is vast and was formed by the
Maranhãoe dam which was built in the 1950s. “The dammed river splits in three,
meaning you can choose which direction to row in depending on the elements,”
explains Satch. “Plus, it ticks off the mileage faster than when you have to
stop/start every two kilometres. You can easily cover twenty kilometres,
spinning just once”. It has a buoyed 2km course in the centre that was brought
over from the famous Bosbaan in Amsterdam, venue of the 2014 World
Championships.
There has been rowing on the lake, on and
off, for almost 50 years. A young doctor by the name of João Oliveira first put
oars to water in the 1970s. Working at the time with an initiative to boost
local sports participation, Oliveira was the first to spot the lake’s
potential. He would never have predicted it would one day draw rowing gods such
as Olaf Tufte, Mahe Drysdale and Emma Twigg. Word eventually spread to the
Lisbon clubs who came when they could, to escape the capital’s wide and choppy
River Tagus.
One such club visiting the lake in 1990
included the talented young Luis Ahrens. Ahren’s lifelong love for the sport
began by chance. “I saw a single sculler while walking by the river with my
mother one day,” he recalls, “and I decided I wanted to do that. I signed up to
the first rowing team I found. I wanted to get fit enough to be a rally
driver”. His career however soon saw Ahrens rise to the national rowing team,
competing internationally between 1992 and 2007. Today, he sits as president of
the Portuguese Rowing Federation.
“My first
time here was with my club in 1990,” he explains, “but the idea to build
something for rowers came in 1997”. The catalyst was a conversation at a
wedding in 2004 where Ahrens bumped into de Veiga, an architect at the time and
brother-in-law to his ex-wife. “We were just chatting, talking about life,”
explains de Veiga, “when Luis told me about his idea to make a place especially
for rowers to come to. Two days later, I came to visit here. I trusted him”.
A business plan was
drawn up and Ahrens sold his car to pay for registration of their company. “I
used to row by and see the spot where the gym now stands,” he recalls. “I would
say, that’s the spot, that’s where the hotel should go”. They identified the
area as a farm on the eastern shore of the dam and, having traced the owner
through council records, they arranged a meeting. “We felt like we were only
kids,” de Veiga admits, as the pair were only 32 at the time. “We asked Luis’s
uncle to come. We wanted to have an adult with us”. The meeting was a success
and a deal to buy the farm was struck. By a fortunate coincidence, they
discovered that the owner had already secured planning permission to build a
hotel on the site, although not the sort Luis and Pedro had in mind – “He
didn’t even know what rowing was,” jokes Ahrens. In 2005, they purchased the
property with a loan from the bank.
For the first two years, before construction
of the hotel began, the duo rented local villas dotted around the dam to
accommodate the visiting teams. Ever attentive to the athletes, de Veiga once
covered over 200 km in one weekend, driving between villas and checking on the
rowers’ needs. Eventually, with further financial investment and funding from
the tourist board, building of the hotel began in 2007.
“Avis is by far the best training location
I've been to,” says George Nash, member of the British Eight and former Olympic
bronze medal winning pair partner to Satch. “Everything there is set up for
high performance training. The rooms are a stone's throw away from the lake,
there are miles of perfect water and the food is amazing. You can’t ask for
much more than that”. If you’re not rowing or sleeping on camp, you’re probably
eating and the food at Herdade Da Cortesia is excellent. Like everything else
at the Hotel, the menu is designed to cater exactly for the needs of a rower
undergoing the physical demands of camp. “Before the British Rowing team came
for the first time, they sent through an enormous list of nutritional
requirements. After that visit, they knew they didn't need to worry anymore,”
explains de Veiga.
Ahrens and de Veiga forbid any of their
twenty-three hotel staff from working if they might be ill – the health of the
athletes is far too important. The pair are both invested deeply in the development
of the teams that come to stay and have a genuine desire to see them succeed.
On first name terms with many of the squads, they have even come to know
individuals’ dietary requirements and which rooms they like. They and their
staff have grown close to
teams
that come time and again. “To us, Luis and Pedro are like friends,” says Satch.
“It’s always good to see them”. They fondly recount stories of surfing with
Olympians and evenings spent chatting into the small hours with Grobler over a
bottle of red wine. This year, they were even invited to the annual GB team
dinner in London.
It wasn't always easy. With no prior
experience in the hospitality business, Ahrens admits the early days of the
hotel presented a steep learning curve. “The first week we suddenly realised we
hadn't planned for the amount of gar
bage that is produced by a large rowing
team. We ended up filling a boat trailer”. They clearly love what they do however,
deriving huge pleasure from simply being around the sport and the athletes. “I
think the sport’s greatest asset is the rowers,” muses Ahrens. “They are
just good people”.
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