Khaleej Times

After two decades, Roland Garros conquers greenhouse effect

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paris — After almost two decades of growing pains, Roland Garros, the historic but claustroph­obic home of the French Open, can finally breathe easy — thanks to the ‘greenhouse effect’.

Players and fans who make the annual pilgrimage to the clay court showpiece, which gets under way on Sunday, will notice radical changes this year as the tournament plays catch-up with its Grand Slam big brothers at Wimbledon and the US and Australian Opens.

Where those three have expanded effortless­ly, embracing 21st century technology with modern stadia and retractabl­e roofs, Roland Garros planners have spent their time in legal wrangles, fighting opposition to plans to extend from their wellheeled and powerful neighbours in one of Paris’s plushest suburbs. Roland Garros was “in danger of asphyxiati­on”, said former French Tennis Federation president Christian Bimes in 2007.

That was when earlier plans were dropped after Paris lost out to London in its bid for the 2012 Olympic Games.

Always at the heart of court battles — and consequent­ly the cause of the delays to expansion dreams first hatched in 2002 — were a batch of humble greenhouse­s.

Built in the 19th century, the greenhouse­s in the adjacent Autueil gardens are home to rare flora and fauna.

The Serres d’Autueil, said campaigner­s, would be in peril from plans to build a 5,000-seater stadium next to them.

The federation, who even once pondered abandoning Roland Garros in favour of a new site in the suburbs, eventually triumphed in their court tussles.

Greenhouse­s have been renovated and renewed and work on the new semi-submerged arena is well underway and will be operationa­l for the 2019 French Open.

It will be called the SimonneMat­hieu stadium in honour of a former national women’s champion and French resistance fighter of the Second World War.

“It is the symbol of a new Roland Garros,” said Gilles Jourdan, who is in charge of the project.

“It will allow the tournament to breathe.”

Another new stadium — Court 18 which will, bizarrely be renamed Court 14 for next year — is already finished and is being used for the 2018 tournament. —

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