OPENING UP

Tokyo opens empty Games venues up for public use

In Summary

• The newly built Canoe Slalom Centre opened on Monday for athletes to practice, while the recently renovated Tatsumi Swimming Centre, which is set to host water polo, will be available for use from mid-August.

• The International Olympic Committee has estimated the postponement will cost it $800 million while Japan has yet to give an estimate on how much the postponement will cost the country.

Tokyo 2020 Olympics and Paralympics organising committee test artificial snowfall to cool down spectators during a canoe event at Sea Forest Waterway in Tokyo, Japan
Tokyo 2020 Olympics and Paralympics organising committee test artificial snowfall to cool down spectators during a canoe event at Sea Forest Waterway in Tokyo, Japan
Image: REUTERS

Tokyo Olympics venues that would have been packed with the world’s top athletes and supporters but for the coronavirus pandemic are now being opened up for use by sporting federations and the public.

The newly built Canoe Slalom Centre opened on Monday for athletes to practice, while the recently renovated Tatsumi Swimming Centre, which is set to host water polo, will be available for use from mid-August.

The Tokyo Metropolitan Government said it plans to also open up other Olympic venues in the coming months, although that could change depending on the coronavirus situation.

The Games had been due to begin last Friday but have been pushed back to 2021. The bill for the Games had come to more than 1.35 trillion yen ($12.6 billion) before the postponement.

The International Olympic Committee has estimated the postponement will cost it $800 million while Japan has yet to give an estimate on how much the postponement will cost the country.