Ecological and Economical Issues Post-Games

Friday, September 23rd, 2011

Olympic Legacy or Olympic Debt

Known as the “Olympic Legacy,” the decade after a city hosts the games is often quite prosperous. With an enhanced infrastructure system in place, the city is often a tourist and corporate business haven.

The city reap the benefits of enhanced public transportation and will often secure future sporting events due to the excitement of hosting an event at a former Olympic site, but the cost of maintaining those buildings can come at a price.

Cities like Seoul have used their Olympic Stadium since 1984 and still use it today, but it was not used when Korea and Japan co-hosted the 2002 World Cup. Cities like Montreal put themselves into so much debt from the 1976 Olympic Games, that they just finished paying if off in the past decade. These stadiums and venues often created a burden on a city to manage it when they are unable to use that land to built more functional and needed infrastructure.

Often, countries like Korea and China use the Olympics to showcase their entire nation and not just one specific city.

Maybe there is a way to begin to think how these megastructures can be reconfigured to serve other purposes for a city.


Friday, September 23rd, 2011

Be Green or Get Protested

International environmental watchdogs, such as Greenpeace and the United Nations Environment Programme have become more vocal on large scale sporting events trying to get the respective organizing committees to think about all issues that encompass an event from pre-event planning to post-event reuse and recycling.

Greenpeace has created Olympic Environmental Guidelines that outline 34 guidelines that should be addressed when planning for the Games.  Click here to read them.

The United Nations Environment Programme has partnered with the IOC since 1994 to advise them on environmental decisions regarding the Olympic games.

 



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