Odeo

Explainer: What's Next for the Bird's Nest?

Published on Aug 27, 2008 in none

Slate's Explainer Podcast

Slate's Explainer Podcast

Listing 451-480 of 520 episodes

Prev 30 | Next 30

Explainer: What's a "Compliance Fund"?

Explainer: What's a "Compliance ...

September 15, 2008

Explainer: Ike Goes to Gitmo

Explainer: Ike Goes to Gitmo

September 12, 2008

Explainer: Who First Put "Lipstick on a Pig"?

Explainer: Who First Put "Lipsti...

September 11, 2008

Explainer: What Happens if You Fall Into a Black Hole?

Explainer: What Happens if You F...

September 10, 2008

Explainer: Staying at the Hanoi Hilton

Explainer: Staying at the Hanoi ...

September 08, 2008

Explainer: Hockey Moms vs. Soccer Moms

Explainer: Hockey Moms vs. Socce...

September 05, 2008

Explainer: Vetting Vet

Explainer: Vetting Vet

September 04, 2008

Explainer: Aerial Wolf Gunning 101

Explainer: Aerial Wolf Gunning 101

September 03, 2008

Explainer: Drunk and High in Denver

Explainer: Drunk and High in Denver

August 29, 2008

Explainer: Can You Really "Own American Wind and Sunshine"?

Explainer: Can You Really "Own A...

August 28, 2008

Explainer: What's Next for the Bird's Nest?

Explainer: What's Next for the B...

August 27, 2008

Explainer: How Do You Blow Up a Rocket?

Explainer: How Do You Blow Up a ...

August 26, 2008

Explainer: How Educational is Re-Education?

Explainer: How Educational is Re...

August 22, 2008

Explainer: Beach Volleyball in Iran?

Explainer: Beach Volleyball in I...

August 21, 2008

Explainer: Do White People Really Come From the Caucasus?

Explainer: Do White People Reall...

August 20, 2008

Explainer: Jamaican Me Speedy

Explainer: Jamaican Me Speedy

August 20, 2008

Explainer: Jamaican Me Speedy

Explainer: Jamaican Me Speedy

August 19, 2008

Explainer: Big Brother in the Odometer

Explainer: Big Brother in the Od...

August 18, 2008

Explainer: Why Are Georgia and Georgia Both Named Georgia?

Explainer: Why Are Georgia and G...

August 14, 2008

Explainer: Why Do Fencers Shriek?

Explainer: Why Do Fencers Shriek?

August 13, 2008

Explainer: The Afterlife for Scientologists

Explainer: The Afterlife for Sci...

August 12, 2008

Explainer: Why Do Banks Fail on Fridays?

Explainer: Why Do Banks Fail on ...

August 11, 2008

Explainer: Can You Stockpile Gasoline?

Explainer: Can You Stockpile Gas...

August 07, 2008

Explainer: Can My Shrink Rat Me Out?

Explainer: Can My Shrink Rat Me ...

August 06, 2008

Explainer: Can I Sell You a Bridge in Brooklyn?

Explainer: Can I Sell You a Brid...

August 04, 2008

Explainer: Obama at the Western Wall

Explainer: Obama at the Western ...

August 01, 2008

Explainer: Is Killing Liberals a Hate Crime?

Explainer: Is Killing Liberals a...

July 31, 2008

Explainer: Do Gas Prices Rise Faster Than They Fall?

Explainer: Do Gas Prices Rise Fa...

July 30, 2008

Explainer: Funky Chicken

Explainer: Funky Chicken

July 29, 2008

Explainer: Can Bug Spray Explode?

Explainer: Can Bug Spray Explode?

July 28, 2008

Prev 30 | Next 30

View all 517 episodes in the archive » 

What's Next for the Bird's Nest? The afterlife of Olympic stadiums. By Juliet Lapidos For the 29th Olympiad, which ended on Sunday, the Chinese bui... More

What's Next for the Bird's Nest? The afterlife of Olympic stadiums. By Juliet Lapidos For the 29th Olympiad, which ended on Sunday, the Chinese built or renovated 31 venues in and around Beijing. Construction of the six main sporting facilities—including the Bird's Nest and the Water Cube—cost more than $2 billion. For the 2004 Olympics in Athens, which was conducted on a somewhat smaller scale, the Greeks built 22 venues. What happens to all the fancy stadiums after the closing ceremonies? They're downsized into workaday sporting arenas, reborn as hotels and shopping malls, or fall into disrepair. The Bird's Nest stadium will become home to Beijing's Guoan Football Club and double as an entertainment complex for concerts. State-run investment group CITIC will reduce seating from 91,000 to 80,000 and redevelop the surrounding area to include hotels, malls, and restaurants. It's estimated that the reconstruction will cost 300 million yuan (almost $44 million) and that the annual operating cost of the stadium complex will be about 70 million yuan (about $10.2 million). Seating will also be reduced at the Water Cube, which will become a training and recreation center for swimmers and divers. Plans are underway to add tennis courts, retail outlets, restaurants, and night clubs. As for some of the less talked-about venues: The fencing hall will be converted into a conference center; the National Indoor Stadium will become a multi-use facility, hosting arts and entertainment events as well as athletic competitions; and athlete accommodations in the Olympic Village are being sold as private residences. Especially when compared with Beijing's detailed plans, Athens hasn't handled the post-Olympics well. The badminton stadium built for the 2004 Games is now a theater, and a government ministry has moved into the media center. But the two main arenas at the Faliro Bay Complex are vacant, there are squatters' camps in the adjoining fields, and the open-air swimming pool goes unused. Sydney, site of the 2000 Games, has fared a bit better. The National Rugby League holds its grand finale at the main stadium, and other entertainment events take place there as well. Redevelopment of the Olympic Park as a mixed-use residential and commercial site, however, has been slow going. Plans weren't finalized until 2005, and construction isn't finished yet. After hosting the Games in 1996, Atlanta turned its main stadium over to the Atlanta Braves. Georgia Tech manages the aquatic center and houses students in the Olympic Village. The city uses the Centennial Olympic Park for its annual Independence Day fireworks display and for outdoor concerts. Lake Placid, site of the 1980 Winter Games, can lay claim to the most bizarre post-use plan. After the Games, the athletes' village became Ray Brook, a correctional facility. (Prison-camp inmates had constructed the ski trails for the alpine events.) Less

Original Permalink
Copyright: All rights reserved by creator

Tags:

Report a Problem

You may also like...

Explainer: How to Caucus

Explainer: How to Caucus

10 months old

Explainer: How Do You Build an Island?

Explainer: How Do You Build an I...

11 months old

Explainer: Can You Eat Squirrels?

Explainer: Can You Eat Squirrels?

9 months old

Explainer: Can You Eat Squirrels?

Explainer: Can You Eat Squirrels?

9 months old

Tuesday February 12, 2008 : Evolution Explainer

Tuesday February 12, 2008 : Evol...

9 months old

Explainer: Squirrel a la Huckabee?

Explainer: Squirrel a la Huckabee?

9 months old

Explainer: How to Caucus

Explainer: How to Caucus

10 months old

Explainer: How Do You Build an Island?

Explainer: How Do You Build an I...

11 months old

Slate Explainer: What the Heck is 3G? [MP3]

Slate Explainer: What the Heck i...

4 months old

Explainer: Chris Penn on the Lending Crisis

Explainer: Chris Penn on the Len...

2 months old