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Future of three 2012 venues are in danger



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Published Date: 29 August 2008
THE future of three controversial London 2012 Olympic venues hangs in the balance after the government ordered a review into their viability and value for money.
Olympics minister Tessa Jowell has called in accountants KPMG to carry out a viability test on the proposed equestrian venue at Greenwich Park, the shooting facilities at the Royal Artillery Barracks, Woolwich, and the basketball venue in the main
Olympic Park.

The three have been criticised by local groups and sporting bodies over their cost, impact and legacy.

"We have commissioned KPMG to do a report on the equestrian, shooting and basketball venues, looking at whether the Olympic experience and the legacy they will provide represents value for money," Jowell said.

"When you take the costs for these venues, it seems like a lot of money to a lot of people. It is a sort of testing-to-destruction to see whether that spending can be justified."

Jowell said it was "possible but unlikely" the venues could be scrapped after the review, which is expected to take several months.

The government is under pressure to keep costs down after the 2012 budget soared to £9.3 billion. The three venues in doubt are temporary and will not provide any legacy – a key plank of London's successful bid.

The 23,000-seater stadium in Greenwich Park will be removed after 2012 as will the 7,500-seater facilities at the Royal Artillery Barracks.

The 12,000-seater basketball arena in the Olympic Park, which is to host the qualifying rounds, is set to be relocated after the finals, due to be held at the O2 Dome in Greenwich.

Woolwich is unpopular with the sport's governing body, British Shooting. It prefers a site at Dartford where a permanent international-standard shooting centre could be built.

Local groups have complained that Greenwich, part of a World Heritage Site and is London's oldest Royal Park dating back to 1433, is an inappropriate place to host the equestrian event.

The cost of the venues will not be revealed until contracts have been agreed, but they are expected to total tens of millions of pounds.

The Olympic authorities have already had to change certain venues. Fencing was moved to the ExCel centre, while canoeing and the kayak slalom was moved to Broxbourne, Hertfordshire, after fears over high levels of contamination.





The full article contains 398 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 28 August 2008 9:56 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: London Olympics 2012
 
1

james 1st,

hamilton nz 30/08/2008 03:17:55
the british olympic association should be ashamed of themselves, after effectively lying about the cost of holding the games to procure them they are going to allow such waste. they will of course say thatthey have not lied but the cost has gone up too far and too fast for that to be the case. just another london bonus, will of course not count as a subsidy as it wii be deemed of national importance.
when will the residents of scotland wales ireland and northern england ever wake up, westminster government means grow london stuff the rest
2

Bzzzz,

Edinburgh 03/10/2008 01:32:01
And after Lord Coe's comments last night they can ram the whole thing. FTU!

 

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