Tokyo equestrian complex ready to go
The equestrian facilities for the postponed Olympics are ready to go, and set to hold future fixtures after the Games
THE completed equestrian facilities for the Tokyo Olympics are “stunning” – and could host more major events in future.
Carola Brighenti, the Games’ assistant to eventing coordinator Alec Lochore, told H&H that while finishing touches will not be made until just before the postponed event next summer, the equestrian park is complete.
“It’s owned by the Japan Racing Association, and they’ve invested quite a lot in it,” she said, adding that more events will be held there after the Games. “I wouldn’t be surprised if in 2023, we had the Global Champions Tour in Tokyo.”
Ms Brighenti said the main park, for the dressage and showjumping, will seat about 9,000 people, while Sea Forest Park, where the cross-country will run, has capacity for 10,000.
She added the facilities will be “breathtaking” for spectators.
“They’ve done a great job keeping green spaces,” she said. “Of the area inside the green track, half is cross-country training and the other half a forest, which people can walk through, with a ‘nest’ so they can climb up and see the venue from above.”
A good atmosphere is likely, with dressage and showjumping taking place under floodlights in the evenings, to beat the heat.
Ms Brighenti said feedback from riders after the 2019 test event was positive, and the footing will be tested extensively before the Games to ensure it is of the highest quality.
The showjumps are being made by a French company, and there will be a Japanese theme.
“Between the jumping and cross-country, everything we can will be about Japan,” she said.
In other areas, work is ongoing and preparations will restart next March, a year after they stopped owing to the coronavirus.
The Tokyo organising committee announced last month it was working on more than
200 ideas to simplify and reduce costs for the rescheduled Games, and that reducing the number of spectators has not been ruled out, although the competition schedule is unchanged at present.
An FEI spokesman told H&H: “Along with all international federations, the FEI is in close collaboration with the International Olympic and Paralympic Committees and the Tokyo Organising Committee to start identifying areas where we can improve cost efficiency in the overall service delivery of both the Olympic and Paralympic Games, while always taking into account the health and safety of everyone involved.”