By David Owen
June 20 – The cost of transforming a patch of run-down East London real estate into the beating heart of the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games and then a multi-use venue that will serve as football club West Ham United’s leased home is set to exceed £700 million.
This follows the announcement that contract costs for transformation of the £429 million former Olympic Stadium have been confirmed by the London Legacy Development Corporation (LLDC) at £272 million.
A statement released on the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park website on Friday said that the cost reflected the “huge scale of the works undertaken to transform the former Olympic venue from a temporary athletics stadium into a year-round multi-use arena capable of delivering world class sporting and cultural events”.
Work included removal of the original roof and light paddles and installation of a new permanent roof said to be the largest of its kind in the world.
A retractable seating system, designed to bring football and rugby spectators close to the pitch, required the removal of the lower seating bowl. Other works included installing catering facilities, toilets and turnstiles.
Work is to pause this year to permit the venue to host five Rugby World Cup fixtures and a number of other events. The stadium will then re-open permanently in 2016.
The cost and extent of the reconfiguration work underline the challenge of ensuring a viable long-term future for a main Summer Olympic stadium, utilised typically for athletics, ceremonies and sometimes football, even in a major world centre such as London.
David Goldstone, LLDC chief executive, said: “We have invested in transforming a temporary athletics venue into a permanent world class multi-use arena that has a secure and long-term sustainable future. This has required a significant amount of work and innovative engineering solutions. Alongside the transformation work, the deals signed with British Athletics and West Ham United, and the appointment of a stadium operator [Vinci], ensures the stadium will pay its way and not require any continuing subsidy from the taxpayer.”
West Ham plan to play at the venue from the start of the 2016-17 season, while it will also host the 2017 World Athletics Championships.
It was announced last October that roof issues had entailed an increase in the value of a contract with construction group Balfour Beatty from £154 million to £189.9 million.
Friday’s release emphasised that the legacy for the local community adjacent to the stadium would include up to 100,000 free tickets a year to West Ham matches.
West Ham have what is likely to be the deal of the century in that they are only contributing £15 million to the stadium redevelopment costs plus annual maintenance costs of about £2 million.
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