The Gold Coast Bulletin

Games guru slams lack of vision over Brisbane venues

- Stephanie Bennett

The guru behind Sydney’s 2000 Olympics has taken aim at the lack of vision over Brisbane’s Games venue plans, pushing the politician­s to partner with the private sector and take a “common sense” approach.

Speaking on 4BC, the chief executive of Sydney’s successful bid, Rod McGeoch, said there was “no need to panic” – but also said key to Sydney’s success was the “leadership was strong enough to keep the whole matter impartial”.

“The idea was that then the community would 100 per cent be behind it – and I still think you can do that [in Brisbane] with the right kind of leadership, and the right messaging,” he said.

In reference to Premier Steven Miles’ decision to reject the findings of an independen­t review to build a new stadium at

Victoria Park to serve the city in the coming decades – and instead upgrade the ageing Queensland Sport and Athletics Centre – Mr McGeoch said any plans needed to look long-term.

“Why would anybody think that a 16-day sporting event should pay for a piece of sporting infrastruc­ture that you’re going to have for 50 years,” he said. “We opened the Sydney Olympic Stadium in 1997 – 27 years later the thing looks basically new.

“This visitor economy in Sydney last year was worth $47bn. So when somebody baulks at a stadium costing $2bn to $3bn … let’s think about the visitor economy in a much bigger way. Perth has a 65,000-seat stadium, Adelaide 60,000, Melbourne 100,000, Sydney 85,000 – why would the city baulk at something where you might have 60,000 seats and instead start to think in terms of something that will hold 40,000.”

Speaking on the 10-year runway Brisbane had been given in the lead-up to hosting the 2032 Games – as opposed to Sydney’s seven – Mr McGeoch said there was “plenty of time”.

But he also urged for more considerat­ion to be given to partnering with private enterprise, instead of taxpayers footing the entire bill.

 ?? ?? Rod McGeoch.
Rod McGeoch.

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