The Borneo Post

Clouds gather over Japan’s ambitious Osaka World Expo

- Etienne Balmer

One of the largest wooden structures ever built is taking shape in Osaka, but hopes that Expo 2025 will unite the world are being dogged by cost blowouts and a lack of public enthusiasm.

The imposing circular centrepiec­e will be crowned by a 20-metre-high sloping canopy, designed by top architect Sou Fujimoto, known as the “Grand Roof”.

It has a circumfere­nce of a staggering two kilometres and 161 countries and territorie­s will show off their trade opportunit­ies and cultural attraction­s at pavilions within the vast latticed ring.

A crane hoisted a block of beams into place this week as organisers said constructi­on was largely on schedule, one year before visitors will be welcomed.

Expo 2025 global PR director Sachiko Yoshimura maintained that global participan­ts would be “united” by the event even though there are conflicts in Ukraine, Gaza and elsewhere.

Russia will not be among the participan­ts at Expo 2025, which will run from April 13 to October 13.

“Of course there are so many crises around the world, but we want everybody to actually get together and think about the future and sustainabi­lity,” Yoshimura said.

It has also met a lukewarm response in Japan, where promotion is ramping up and the red-and-blue Expo 2025 mascot “Myaku-Myaku” – billed by the official website as “a mysterious creature born from the unificatio­n of cells and water” – is ever-present.

A recent Kyodo News survey found that 82 per cent of Japanese companies, sponsors and others involved said “fostering domestic momentum” would be a challenge.

Ballooning budget

The constructi­on budget has ballooned 27 per cent from 2020 estimates to 235 billion yen ($1.5 billion) due to inflation and Japan’s chronic worker shortage.

Some say the costs are also hard to justify when 6,300 people are still in evacuation centres and hotels after an earthquake on New Year’s Day devastated parts of central Japan.

Fujimoto’s “Grand Roof” alone has a price tag of 35 billion yen and has been slammed by opposition leader Kenta Izumi as “the world’s most expensive

parasol”.

The “Grand Roof” and other structures are temporary, with no clear plan for them other than organisers saying they will be reused or recycled.

The site on an artificial island in Osaka Bay will be cleared after the Expo, with plans to build a resort there containing Japan’s first casino.

Jun Takashina, deputy secretary general of the Japan Associatio­n for Osaka 2025, acknowledg­ed budget and regulatory “struggles” among foreign participan­ts but said organisers would help make sure the displays are ready in time.

Among the most hotly anticipate­d attraction­s are flying electric cars, which take off vertically, showcasing the event’s

technologi­cal and environmen­tal aspiration­s.

But the vehicles – subject to reams of regulation­s – will be a “kind of experiment”, Yoshimura said.

More than 1.2 million tickets have already been sold and organisers hope to attract 28.2 million visitors, including 3.5 million from abroad.

That would be four million more than the last World Fair in Dubai but pales in comparison to the 64 million people who attended the 1970 Expo in Osaka, a record until it was overtaken by Shanghai in 2010.

‘Future like science fiction

The first world fair to celebrate culture and industrial progress was held in London in 1851, with the Eiffel Tower built

for the 1889 Paris World Fair.

Osaka academic Shinya Hashizume, a specialist in architectu­re history and town planning, said he was amazed as a 10-year-old when he saw a “future that looked like science fiction” at the 1970 Expo.

The first film in IMAX format was shown at that event and visitors could admire rocks brought back from the Moon.

“Those six months were extraordin­ary for Osaka. Simply put, the whole town was having

a party,” he said.

The advent of mass tourism and hyper-connected societies may have since lessened the attraction but some Osaka residents still think it’s a good idea.

Kosuke Ito, a 36-year-old doctor, said it would “strengthen the economy”.

However, Yuka Nakamura, 26, said she might be put off by adult entry fees ranging from 4,000 to 7,500 yen ($25 to $50) a day. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photos ?? This file aerial photo shows Panasonic Stadium Suita (left), home of Japanese J-League football team Gamba Osaka, near Expo Commemorat­ion Park (far right), the former site of the 1970 Osaka Expo, in Suita, Osaka prefecture during a government sponsored trip above the city on Oct 12, 2023. The 1970 Expo in Osaka drew more than 64 million people – an Expo record until it was overtaken in 2010 by Shanghai.
— AFP photos This file aerial photo shows Panasonic Stadium Suita (left), home of Japanese J-League football team Gamba Osaka, near Expo Commemorat­ion Park (far right), the former site of the 1970 Osaka Expo, in Suita, Osaka prefecture during a government sponsored trip above the city on Oct 12, 2023. The 1970 Expo in Osaka drew more than 64 million people – an Expo record until it was overtaken in 2010 by Shanghai.
 ?? ?? This aerial photo shows the “Tower of the Sun” by Japanese artist Taro Okamoto, which was the symbol of the 1970 Osaka Expo and now the location of the Expo Commemorat­ion Park in Suita, Osaka prefecture, seen during a government sponsored trip above the city.
This aerial photo shows the “Tower of the Sun” by Japanese artist Taro Okamoto, which was the symbol of the 1970 Osaka Expo and now the location of the Expo Commemorat­ion Park in Suita, Osaka prefecture, seen during a government sponsored trip above the city.
 ?? ?? A view of Yumeshima island (top), an area of reclaimed land in Osaka, as constructi­on continues at the site for the 2025 Expo.
A view of Yumeshima island (top), an area of reclaimed land in Osaka, as constructi­on continues at the site for the 2025 Expo.
 ?? ?? This photo shows workers walking at the constructi­on site of the “Grand Roof”, known as the Ring, one of the world’s largest wooden structures, at the site of the 2025 Expo on Yumeshima island, an area of reclaimed land in Osaka.
This photo shows workers walking at the constructi­on site of the “Grand Roof”, known as the Ring, one of the world’s largest wooden structures, at the site of the 2025 Expo on Yumeshima island, an area of reclaimed land in Osaka.
 ?? ?? Constructi­on of the “Grand Roof ”, known as the Ring, one of the world’s largest wooden structures, at the site of the 2025 Expo on Yumeshima island, an area of reclaimed land in Osaka.
Constructi­on of the “Grand Roof ”, known as the Ring, one of the world’s largest wooden structures, at the site of the 2025 Expo on Yumeshima island, an area of reclaimed land in Osaka.
 ?? ?? Constructi­on underway at the site of the 2025 Expo on Yumeshima island, an area of reclaimed land in Osaka.
Constructi­on underway at the site of the 2025 Expo on Yumeshima island, an area of reclaimed land in Osaka.
 ?? ?? A man walking past a display of “Myaku-Myaku” dolls, the official mascot, at an official store for the 2025 Expo in Osaka.
A man walking past a display of “Myaku-Myaku” dolls, the official mascot, at an official store for the 2025 Expo in Osaka.
 ?? ?? A woman looking at a “Myaku-Myaku” doll, the official mascot, at an official store for the 2025 Expo in Osaka.
A woman looking at a “Myaku-Myaku” doll, the official mascot, at an official store for the 2025 Expo in Osaka.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia