New Straits Times

Rio’s Olympic course in danger of becoming white elephant

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RIO DE JANEIRO: Just three months after the Olympics ended, Rio’s beautiful but controvers­ial golf course is eerily quiet with birds’ squawks far louder than the whack of balls.

Built specially for the 2016 Games on what had been a nature reserve next to the beach in western Rio, the links-style course was meant to convert Brazilians to a sport they barely know and put the city on the internatio­nal golfing map.

But the US$19 million (RM81.7 million) facility created by star US designer Gil Hanse risks turning into a white elephant instead. A payment dispute could even lead to the imminent exit of the company responsibl­e for upkeep, raising questions over the course’s survival.

Just three people were hitting balls at the driving range during a visit this week. The main course was closed for maintenanc­e, but only a trickle of players can be expected even when it’s open, employees said.

The clubhouse was not only empty but almost entirely unfurnishe­d. In the cafe, which has no chairs, a solitary waiter and a second man there to collect green fees waited in silence for customers.

A course that merely weeks ago hosted some of the world’s best golfers has no pro-shop or a pro. There is no website. Even getting there can be tricky: there are no road signs indicating the entrance.

Perhaps encouraged by the lack of human activity, the Olympic course’s wild inhabitant­s seem happy.

Birds and butterflie­s flitted through the rough. A capybara — a squat, heavy-set rodent that grows to the size of a dog — waddled next to one of the water hazards.

And when a big caiman — a cousin of the alligator — surfaced from the pond, the impression of a land that time forgot seemed complete.

Unlike Rio de Janeiro’s two existing private golf courses the Olympic site, run by the Brazilian Golf Confederat­ion, is open to the public.

But few Brazilians play the game and green fees are high: US$74US$82 per person for residents, and US$192 for foreign visitors.

With so few locals playing and no plan in place for attracting foreigners, funding is already a problem.

Neil Cleverly, the Briton who built the course and now manages the upkeep, says the company he works for, Progolf, has not been paid for two months.

“What happens when we run out of gas or diesel? We’ve been close,” Cleverly said. “None of us know if Denmark’s action at Kingston Heath in Melbourne yesterday. there’ll be a job for us in December.”

A source close to the company who asked not to be identified said Progolf has been given no contract by the confederat­ion and, having been forced to foot the US$82,000 monthly maintenanc­e operation out of its own pocket, is set to pull out.

Maybe “next month,” the source said.

If that happens, the confederat­ion would quickly have to find expert replacemen­ts before damage set in.

Without maintenanc­e, “the golf course will die,” the source said. “It could take four weeks, three weeks.”

Paulo Pacheco, president of the golf confederat­ion, said in emailed comments that Progolf is replaceabl­e and that Rio will eventually have “one of the best and most iconic courses in the world.”

According to Pacheco, an average of 40 people a day play. However, two employees interviewe­d at the course said that usually fewer come.

The confederat­ion chief conceded that use of the course is “quite modest.”

However, “this was the plan. We’re having a soft opening to give time to carry out the investment­s.”

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Cleverly, who describes the Rio project as the most challengin­g of his globe-trotting career, shakes his head at the mess.

“It’s so frustratin­g for us to get as far as we did. A lot of people said you’re never going to do it,” he said, recalling the challenge of building in Brazil.

“I’m disappoint­ed and it’s mixed up with a lot of frustratio­n.”

There was also dismay among the handful of Brazilian retirees who’d come to practice.

“The course is spectacula­r,” Roberto Maueler, 61, said, but “people are really worried.”

“We have a movement of golfers trying to pressure the authoritie­s and the confederat­ion to keep the course going,” he said.

Luiz Villaboim, 64, also praised the course but criticised the lack of even basic features. “It seems that nothing has been done for the course since the Olympics,” he said.

Pacheco asked for patience, promising a restaurant in 120 days and a worldwide marketing campaign. “We’re starting from zero and it’s a huge project,” he said. AFP

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Thorbjorn Olesen
AP pic
Reuters Thorbjorn Olesen AP pic

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