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| Danny Jordaan © Action Images |
Are the new stadiums built for the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, a country where football jostles with rugby and cricket for audience, destined to become white elephants after the month-long tournament?
That's the 12.1-billion-rand, or 1.57-billion-dollar question -
the cost of five new stadiums in Cape Town, Durban, Port Elizabeth,
Nelspruit and Polokwane.
The "white elephant" spectre is one that has come to haunt World
Cup and Olympic Games hosts.
A little over a year after the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games China
is struggling to find a real purpose for its $450-million
showpiece Bird's Nest stadium, while one of Germany's 2006 World
Cup stadiums in Leipzig also struggles to attract more than a few
thousand fans to third-division games.
With six months to go until kick-off in Johannesburg, South
Africa is faced with the possibility that some of its new venues
will be gathering dust beyond July 2010.
That the country needed a raft of new and improved stadiums is
not in doubt.
The country's existing football stadiums were too small and
shabby by World Cup standards.
But some of the stadiums are controversial nonetheless.
Cape Town and Durban already had decent rugby stadiums of more
than 50,000 seats, which some say could have been expanded to host
eight World Cup games each and two semifinals.
Both cities opted instead for new stadiums.
Wedged between Table Mountain and the Atlantic Ocean, Cape
Town's new 68,000-seat Greenpoint stadium has an undeniably
stunning backdrop.
But locations like that comes at a price - an extra R1.2 billion
in site-specific costs to be exact, says Cape Town's 2010
spokesman Pieter Cronje, Cape Town's 2010 manager.
By the time it's finished, Greenpoint stadium will have cost R4.5
billion, more than Beijing's Bird's Nest and more than double
the initial estimate.
The national government is picking up most of the tab but the
city, which like most South African cities is chronically under-
funded and struggling to contain violent anti-poverty protests,
still faces a hefty shortfall.
And it has yet to secure an anchor tenant: The city's two
Premier Soccer League teams have too few fans to fill it and the
provincial rugby team is deeply attached to its iconic Newlands
Stadium.
Cronje believes Stade de France and local company SAIL, the
consortium chosen to operate the venue will fill it with big
concerts, operas and other events.
"We believe the long-term advantage will outweigh this extra
cost at the outset," he says.
Durban says it was also thinking long-term when it decided to
build a new 70,000-seat stadium a few metres from a 52,000-seat
rugby stadium.
The port city plans to throw its hat in the ring for the 2024
Olympics and has equipped Moses Mabhida Stadium with an athletics
track, as well as a 106-metre arch with inbuilt cable car, to boost
its bid.
But that stadium too has been shrouded in skepticism. "It
doesn't take a rocket scientist to work out that the city cannot
afford it," Brian Van Zyl, manager of the Sharks rugby team that is
based at the adjacent Absa Stadium said in 2006.
Back then the stadium was predicted to cost 1.6 billion. Three
years later, the cost has nearly doubled to R3.1 billion and
the Sharks are coming under growing pressure to move in.
"You have to invest in infrastructure to proceed from being a
developing country to a developed country," says Errol Heynes,
World Cup director in Port Elizabeth, the country's fifth-largest
city, which gained a R1.9-billion stadium.
Although Port Elizabeth has no Premier League football or Super
15 rugby team, "it will never, ever be a white elephant," he
assured the German Press Agency dpa, predicting a thriving business
in exhibition games and conferences.
Polokwane in northern Limpopo province and Nelspruit in north-
eastern Mpumalanga have also gained new 45,000-seat stadiums, each
costing R1.3 billion. Two schools were requisitioned by the
builders at Nelspruit's Mbombela stadium, sparking violent
protests.
More protests over basic services also appear on the cards in
Johannesburg, which slashed the budget by 1 billion rand this year
to cover overruns at Soccer City, the R3.4-billion nearly-new
venue for the opening game and final.
Danny Jordaan, chief executive of the 2010 local organizing
committee chief has defended the spending, saying: "All of the
infrastructure programs gave jobs to 415,000 people during this
period where most people are shedding jobs, so I think the World
Cup has made a contribution."
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