Birmingham Post

Less than 100 days to go – and we’re on track

- Ian Reid Ian Reid, CEO of Birmingham 2022

THIS week saw another special milestone on the countdown to the Birmingham 2022 Commonweal­th Games as there are now less than 100 days to go until our spectacula­r Opening Ceremony gets underway in the newly transforme­d Alexander Stadium.

It’s hard to believe that the journey towards the Games, which started when the event was awarded to the city of Birmingham back in December 2017, is nearly over. And what a journey it has been!

Organising a major sports event during a global pandemic has not been without its challenges but I am incredibly proud of my team for what they have achieved and very grateful to our partners for their unwavering support.

One of those partners is Sandwell Council who have overseen the constructi­on of the Sandwell

Aquatics Centre.

This is our only brand-new venue for the Games and so it has been a critical project, and we were delighted to announce earlier this week that this venue is now complete.

It is a truly superb facility which will be in operation during every single one of our eleven days of sport, hosting swimming, Para swimming and diving too.

However, we know that this facility is really just on loan to us from the people of Smethwick, to whom it really belongs, as once the Games is over it will be converted into a community facility.

We hope that local residents will be inspired by the magical sporting moments which we know will take place there this summer.

The Alexander Stadium, our other major constructi­on project for Birmingham 2022, a venue which is almost unrecognis­able from the one which occupied the site for so many years, is almost complete too, with temporary seating which will increase the capacity for the Games to 30,000, continuing to be added over the next few days.

In fact, this week the stadium hosts its first athletics events since the

£72 million refurbishm­ent and in exactly a month’s time it will once again host internatio­nal athletics, with the Birmingham Diamond League being staged there on 21 May.

Other elements of the Games are coming to fruition too.

Just last month we launched the Birmingham 2022 Festival with Wondrous Stories, a fabulous free show which thousands of local people came together for, standing and sitting side by side looking on in awe as local artists and young people combined to deliver a world-class cultural experience.

The Birmingham 2022 Festival is a six-month long celebratio­n and

Thousands of local people have also been selected to be part of the Commonweal­th Collective, our army of volunteers...

showcase of the cultural magnificen­ce of the West Midlands, and it includes 107 different community projects which have been supported by a special fund set up by Birmingham City Council, another of our partners, without whom these Games simply wouldn’t be happening.

We’ve always promised that the

Games will be a celebratio­n of the host city and region, showcasing local talent wherever possible, and that is a promise we intend to keep.

There are local artists, performers, dancers, designers and producers involved in not just the festival, but also in our opening and closing ceremonies and in the Festival Live sites which will be held in the city centre and in seven different areas of Birmingham too.

Thousands of local people have also been selected to be part of the Commonweal­th Collective, our army of volunteers who will help welcome the athletes and officials from 72 nations and territorie­s, and the one million spectators who have already purchased tickets to watch the 286 sessions of sport and Para sport that we have on offer.

This week, to coincide with 100 days to go, our tickets went back on sale.

This final major release included tickets for every single one of the 19 sports and eight Para sports we have on offer, so if you want to join the crowds cheering on the Commonweal­th’s best athletes, now’s the time to secure your seat.

The Games has been a long time coming but whether it be during our school visits, our youth programme activity, our community roadshows, our drop-in sessions or our visits to local parks, sports clubs and other organisati­ons, we have felt the excitement and anticipati­on for this event continuing to build and we’ll do everything possible to make sure that Birmingham can make the most of this moment in sporting history.

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 ?? ?? > Sarah McDonald, Rhiana Burrell and Ashia Hansen at the newly transforme­d Alexander Stadium
> Sarah McDonald, Rhiana Burrell and Ashia Hansen at the newly transforme­d Alexander Stadium

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