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Japan’s Minister of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology Hakubun Shimomura (right) speaks to reporters after a meeting with the prime minister and 2020 Olympics minister at the prime minister’s official residence in Tokyo yesterday. Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe ordered a complete review of plans for Tokyo’s 2020 Olympic stadium amid growing public anger over its two-billion USD price tag.
AFP/Tokyo
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe yesterday ordered plans for Tokyo’s 2020 Olympic stadium to be ditched amid public anger over its $2bn price tag.
The decision will mean the organisers of the 2019 Rugby World Cup will have to find a new venue for the final.
“I have decided we must go back to the drawing board,” Abe told reporters after meeting top Japanese sports officials.
“We have looked at the logistics and construction period and I have made this decision because I was assured that we can definitely complete construction on time.
“We must control costs as far as possible,” he added. “We are determined to draw up the best possible plan, and we have to draft that plan as quickly as possible.”
Iraqi-British architect Zaha Hadid’s futuristic design had been met with fury by many Japanese architects. But a cosmetic row has given way to widespread discontent and public bickering over finances.
Sports Minister Hakubun Shimomura said a new bidding process would be launched. “We will decide the design in six months,” he told reporters. “From design to completion of construction, 50-plus months is looked at. The aim is to finish it by the spring of 2020.”
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) said it had noted the decision and indicated it would closely follow the new stadium plan to make sure the Olympic deal is kept.
“The National Stadium is a national project, which will serve the people of Japan for many years to come. This is why the Japanese government is best placed to decide on what is appropriate for this venue,” said John Coates, an IOC vice president and head of the coordinating commission for Tokyo.
“We understand that the review of the stadium will not affect its delivery for the Olympic and Paralympic Games, and we will work with the Tokyo 2020 Organising Committee to ensure that what is needed for the Games is delivered in the revised plan,” he added.
The 2019 Rugby World Cup became an early casualty of the U-turn with organisers forced to find alternative venues in Tokyo or Yokohama for the final and other matches.
“Unfortunately we cannot build the stadium in time for the rugby World Cup,” said Abe, whose approval rating has plunged in recent months. “But the government remains fully committed to supporting the tournament.”
Construction costs for the new National Stadium have nearly doubled to 252bn yen ($2.03bn), which puts it on track to become the world’s most expensive stadium.
‘Slapdash plans
Earlier this week, the Japanese architect who oversaw the selection of Hadid’s plans, Tadao Ando, backed her blueprint but expressed concern over soaring costs, which dwarf those for the last two Summer Olympics.
London spent around $680mn on the main venue for the 2012 Games, while Beijing’s 2008 “Bird’s Nest” stadium cost less than $500mn.
Yoshimitsu Kobayashi, chairman of influential business lobby the Japan Association of Corporate Executives, on Thursday, criticised the plans as “slapdash” and accused the government of “not seriously working to cut expenditure.”
Construction on Tokyo’s Olympic stadium was to begin in October and was going to be completed by May 2019 - just in time for the Rugby World Cup.
But as the row over financing the project escalated, senior officials sought to distance themselves from blame, Tokyo 2020 president Yoshiro Mori pointing the finger at the sports ministry, while opposition politicians have called for Shimomura’s resignation.
Japan’s sports minister confirmed last month that the cost of the stadium, to be built on the site of the 1964 Tokyo Olympic centrepiece, represented a 90bn yen hike since it was chosen 2012.
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