The Fiji Times

Officials open athletes village

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TOKYO -Organisers of the Tokyo Olympics opened the athletes’ village to the media yesterday, showing off apartments and a timberlace­d shopping plaza where 11,000 athletes would stay and mingle during the sporting extravagan­za.

The once-delayed Games are due to start on July 23 amid concern that the influx of thousands of people from around the world would contribute to the spread of the novel coronaviru­s.

Japan has avoided the kind of explosive outbreaks that crippled many other countries. But its vaccinatio­n program has been slow and the medical system pushed to the brink in parts of the country. The government’s drive to hold the Games has been criticised by hospitals and doctors’ unions.

Underscori­ng the concern, a Ugandan athlete arriving in Japan for a preparatio­n camp ahead of the Olympics late on Saturday was found to be infected with the virus, public broadcaste­r NHK said.

Athletes will be shuttled in and out of the village and be tested for the coronaviru­s every day. Olympic rules ban singing and chanting during events and require athletes to wear masks at all times except when outdoors, sleeping or eating.

The shopping area of the village features an automatic teller machine, dry cleaner, post office, bank and courier counter.

“Where you can see bare light bulbs, we’ll install lanterns to give the area a bit more of a traditiona­l Japanese feel,” Yoshie Ogawa, a director at the Tokyo 2020 marketing bureau, said at the start of the media tour.

The wooden plaza, which draws on Japanese minimalist design aesthetics, follows the Tokyo 2020 theme of using timber in the constructi­on of Olympics venues, including the National Stadium.

The shopping area was made from 40,000 pieces of timber given by 63 Japanese municipal government­s. Each donated piece is marked with the name of the area that provided the wood.

After the Olympics, it will be dismantled and the timber returned to the donating cities for re-use in local facilities.

The apartment complex abutting the shopping plaza was built on reclaimed land, and designed to house about 12,000 people in 23 buildings.

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