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Brisbane Games must fit the region, says IOC

- Reuters Brisbane

The Brisbane 2032 Olympics must fit the city and the region and not the other way round, the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee said yesterday, less than two weeks after plans to construct a new stadium were scrapped.

The existing Lang Park stadium will host the Games’ opening and closing ceremonies after the Queensland government rejected the recommenda­tion of a review that a new A$3.4bn arena be built in the city.

The Quirk Review was commission­ed by the government to look into a plan to rebuild the city’s Gabba cricket ground to host the ceremonies and athletics at the Games as part of a A$2.7bn redevelopm­ent of the Woolloonga­bba suburb.

Queensland Premier Steven Miles, however, decided the stadium would be upgraded rather than torn down and rebuilt.

“For us the messaging is clear: the Games will need to fit the region,” Kirsty Coventry, who heads the IOC’s Coordinati­on Commission,

said in a media call following a meeting with Brisbane Games organisers.

“They (region) need to decide what’s best for them and everyone who lives in these areas, and the Games will adapt to that.”

She said with the Games still more than eight years away this was the time for any major changes.

“Brisbane will now refine the venue master plan. It will take a bit of time for stakeholde­rs, specifical­ly in different levels of government, to decide what’s best for city, the region and the country. The Games will fit into that,” Coventry said.

Lang Park holds 52,500 fans and hosts both rugby codes as well as concerts.

Brisbane was awarded the Olympics in 2021 under the IOC’s New Norm process, a targeted procedure aimed at saving hundreds of millions of dollars for host cities and increasing long-term sustainabi­lity.

Around 80% of the venues for the 2032 Games are in place with the main stadium redevelopm­ent and a federal government­funded A$2.5bn arena to host the swimming the only two major constructi­on projects planned.

“There is no concern at this stage. Not at all,” Olympic Games Executive Director Christophe Dubi said when asked whether the IOC now had concerns about more major changes.

“These are decisions to be made by the communitie­s and when you have the support from the ground up this is how you ensure you have no further issues down the road,” Dubi said.

The 2024 Olympics will be held in Paris and Los Angeles will host the 2028 Games.

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