Cape Breton Post

Olympic rings monument reinstalle­d in Tokyo Bay

- JACK TARRANT

TOKYO — The Olympic rings monument was reinstalle­d in Tokyo Bay on Tuesday, after being removed in August, as organizers ramp up preparatio­ns for next year’s postponed Summer Games.

The rings were later illuminate­d and the neighbouri­ng Rainbow Bridge lit up in a multi-coloured display, as organizers looked to provide a symbol that the rearranged Games can go ahead safely next year.

However, the return of the monument, which stands 15.3 metres tall and 32.6 metres wide and was originally installed in January, was overshadow­ed by requests from the Tokyo Metropolit­an Government that entertainm­ent establishm­ents and restaurant­s close until Dec. 17 because of the ongoing coronaviru­s pandemic.

Because of this, following the rings’ brief illuminati­on on Tuesday, they will go dark until the restrictio­ns are lifted.

However, the return of the rings should send a signal that the Games are indeed getting closer, Tokyo metropolit­an government planning director Atsushi Yanashimiz­u told Reuters.

“Since the symbol is here, we want Tokyo residents and also internatio­nally to feel that the Games are coming very soon,” Yanashimiz­u said.

“Also, we want everyone to feel we will have the Tokyo 2020 Games definitely next year.”

The monument will remain in place next to Rainbow Bridge until the Olympics finish in August before being replaced with the Paralympic­s logo.

The Olympics were pushed back by a year in March because of the pandemic and organizers have yet to provide a figure for how much the postponeme­nt will cost.

On Monday, Kyodo News reported that organizers estimated the cost of COVID19 countermea­sures for the Games would run to around US$960 million.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Workers reinstall giant Olympic rings at the waterfront area at Odaiba Marine Park in Tokyo on Tuesday, after they were temporaril­y taken down in August.
REUTERS Workers reinstall giant Olympic rings at the waterfront area at Odaiba Marine Park in Tokyo on Tuesday, after they were temporaril­y taken down in August.

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