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London Olympics budget: now with 3 times extra flavor!!

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  • London Olympics budget: now with 3 times extra flavor!!

    Olympics 2012 chiefs willing to spend money like water, say MPs

    Officials on the London Olympics project allowed the cost of the 2012 aquatics centre to quadruple because of "risible" finance controls and a willingness to "spend money like water", a report by a committee of MPs says today.

    The Zaha Hadid-designed aquatic centre was originally budgeted at £75m when it was commissioned in 2004, but the Olympic Delivery Authority revealed earlier this month that the final bill will be £242m, with a further £61m spent on a land bridge that forms part of the roof of the building, billed as the most "iconic" of the 2012 venues.

    The huge overspend has prompted the ODA to raid its infrastructure budget to fill the hole left in its venues budget.

    The report by the culture, media and sport select committee criticises the overspend as the most stark example of the failure to control costs.

    "[The aquatic centre] appears to be over-designed and an expensive way of providing the facilities for water sports needed during and after the games," it states. "The history of the aquatics centre shows a risible approach to cost control and that the games' organisers seem to be willing to spend money like water."

    Committee member Paul Farrelly, a Labour MP, called on the National Audit Office to examine how the overspend came about and suggested those responsible should lose their jobs. "If I were in business and a project had overrun by so much I would have investigative accountants crawling all over the project to find out why, and heads would roll," he said.

    The report is the second critical judgment generated by MPs in a fortnight, coming after the public accounts committee found that the government ignored "foreseeable" costs in compiling the original games bid budget of £4bn. The budget has more than doubled to £9.3bn.

    While the select committee congratulated the ODA and the London organising committee on the progress they have made on construction and securing commercial partners, it was highly critical of the financial position, and said that the spiralling cost of the 2012 games had damaged public confidence in the project.

    "The radical revision of cost estimates has been damaging to confidence in the management of the overall programme [and] has exposed the government and games organisers to the charge that the initial bid was kept artificially low to win public support," they state.

    According to the committee's calculations, £3.7bn of the budget, more than 30%, is made up of contingency, and the MPs say that it would be a significant failure if the games ran over budget: "The mark of success in financial management of the games will be to have kept expenditure to a level comfortably below the £9.325bn ceiling."

    The committee also had concerns about the government's failure to publish a detailed plan for the games legacy, which was a key plank of London's bid.

    The committee chairman, John Whittingdale, said: "We are disappointed that little progress has been made in setting out a clear strategy for delivering a permanent increase in sporting participation, despite this being a key feature of the bid."

    The ODA chairman, John Armitt, said: "We believe we have a realistic budget and contingency and there is a rigorous focus on managing costs within this. We are letting contracts, such as the aquatics centre, in line with the revised budget announced last March."

    The shadow Olympics minister, Hugh Robertson, said: "The conclusion that money has been spent like water on an over-elaborate aquatic centre does nothing to restore confidence in the financial management of London 2012."

    Spiralling costs damaging confidence in the project, with Zaha Hadid aquatic centre singled out for criticism
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  • #2
    Olympics budget rises to £9.3bn

    The budget for the 2012 London Olympics has risen to £9.35bn, Culture Secretary Tessa Jowell has told MPs.

    The revised budget is nearly four times the £2.4bn estimate when London's bid succeeded less than two years ago.

    Construction is now budgeted at £5.3bn, there is a £2.7bn "contingency fund", and tax and security costs have risen.

    The Tories attacked her decision to "raid" an extra £675m of lottery funds - which means £1 in every £5 of good cause money now going to the Olympics.

    The budget outlined by Ms Jowell on Thursday largely covers construction costs of the Olympic Park and venues.

    The contingency fund will ensure the government cannot be "held to ransom" as it aims to hit deadlines, Ms Jowell said.

    The government's contribution has risen to £6bn, she said, with £2.2bn coming from the National Lottery - including the additional £675m - and the rest from London's council tax payers.

    London Mayor Ken Livingstone has pledged to contribute an extra £300m, she said - but the money would not be funded from London's council tax, nor higher transport fares.

    The cost of staging the event itself - currently estimated at £2bn - will be met through selling television rights, corporate sponsorship and ticket sales.

    The Department for Culture, Media and Sport later said the £2.4bn estimate from two years ago did not include costs for such items as regeneration and infrastructure - which the £9.3bn now does.

    Responding to criticism of the decision to use more Lottery money, Ms Jowell said that in the "overall scheme of things" its contribution was relatively small.

    She said the Lottery would benefit from profit sharing based on rises in land values in the Olympic park area.

    "London 2012 will bring huge financial gain to the whole country ... and it is only fair that the Lottery good causes should share in any such windfall," she told MPs.

    "I am determined to ensure that this temporary diversion from the existing good causes to the Olympic good cause is done with the least possible disruption."

    Winning the Olympics had brought an extra £7bn of private sector investment to one of the most deprived areas in Europe, Ms Jowell said.

    "The announcement today means it's full steam ahead for 2012," she added.

    But for the Conservatives, the shadow Olympics minister Hugh Robertson said: "If you add together all the separate parts, the budget for which the government is responsible has nearly trebled since the Olympic Bill left Parliament under a year ago.

    "In raiding the Lottery for a further £675m to make up the shortfall the government will penalise precisely the clubs and small organisations, up and down the country, that were supposed to benefit from the Olympics."

    Lottery 'piggy bank'

    Scottish Nationalist Party MP Pete Wishart accused the government of using the National Lottery as "their own personal piggy bank" and said Scottish causes would suffer, to pay for London's regeneration.

    But Big Lottery Fund chairman Sir Clive Booth told the BBC he thought it could have been worse.

    "When I go back to the beginning of February and the numbers we were looking at in terms of increasing costs and what that could have meant in terms of impact on us, this outcome is much, much better," he said.

    Tory MP Mark Field suggested that the original budget was "a lot more slack than it might otherwise have been", because Ms Jowell had not expected London to win the bid.

    She, in turn, accused the Conservatives of trying to undermine the Olympics and said they would have preferred it if London's bid had failed.

    Liberal Democrat MP Don Foster said: "Properly managed, the 2012 Games will bring huge and lasting benefits to all parts of the country.

    "But sadly today's statement and the chaos that has surrounded the last 12 months and more, calls into question the government's ability to provide that proper management."

    Of the £5.3bn budget for the Olympic Delivery Authority announced on Thursday, £3.1bn will be allocated to build the Olympic Park and venues and £1.7bn for regeneration and infrastructure.

    The ODA would also be given a £500m contingency allowance - but the rest of the overall £2.7bn contingency fund would be "locked away", Ms Jowell said.

    Another £600m had been allocated for "wider security" outside the site, and £390m for other costs including the Paralympics and community sports coaches.

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    HOW 2012 ESTIMATES HAVE CHANGED
    2003: Consultants Arup put total cost of building and staging the Games at £1.796bn
    2003: Tessa Jowell launches bid in May telling MPs it will cost £2.375bn - including a 50% contingency
    2005: Bid succeeds in July with "prudent" estimate of preparing for games of £2.4bn
    2006: Tessa Jowell says Olympic Park costs up to £3.3bn
    2007: Olympic Park budget now at £5.3bn - including regeneration and infrastructure
    2007: Total budget, including contingency, security and tax, reaches £9.35bn
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    • #3
      Just wait until all the athletes fly in through Heathrow terminal Five.
      One day Canada will rule the world, and then we'll all be sorry.

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      • #4
        amazingly enough, the current budget (£9bn) 4 years before the games, is the same with the athens budget as it was calculated AFTER the games. and we had to built tons of infrastructure that we didnt have, as well as spent billions in security with all the US terror threats...

        what are they spending money on this time?
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        • #5
          $600 million for an effing aquatics center is just insane.

          Atlanta cost $1.8 billion total to host. The city would have gone bankrupt with an $18 billion bill.
          Last edited by DanS; May 2, 2008, 08:37.
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          • #6
            Re: London Olympics budget: now with 3 times extra flavor!!

            Colour me ****ing shocked.
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            • #7
              Originally posted by DanS
              $600 million for an effing aquatics center is just insane.
              no problem, it's only our money they're spending afterall...
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              • #8
                People spend more then $600 million on bridges all the time and that was a combo bridge and aquatics center. Bad but not horrible value especially if the structure lasts 100 years or more.
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                • #9
                  Originally posted by Oerdin
                  People spend more then $600 million on bridges all the time and that was a combo bridge and aquatics center.
                  the bridge is rather small
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                  • #10
                    The UK seems liable to cost-overruns (or rosy initial cost estimates), but I don't think comparing London to Atlanta or Athens is going to work. Everything is a lot more expensive there and the scope for revenue are much greater. Consider that with the Emirates Stadium London has one the few wholly privately-funded stadiums that's been a succes, and it was hardly a cheap deal.
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                    • #11

                      Hadid was forced to design the iconic structure twice after original designs proved too large for the space allocated on the site.

                      The Olympic Delivery Authority also revealed the cost of the velodrome has increased from £40m to £80m.
                      wow (x2)
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                      • #12
                        i'm comparing with Athens because we didnt have any infrastructure. i was under the impression that most of the facilities already exist in London...
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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by MarkG
                          the bridge is rather small
                          To much concrete and not enough color. Some colorful paint and lights could really turn that into something special or failing that how about a green roof?
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                          • #14
                            Originally posted by Colonâ„¢
                            The UK seems liable to cost-overruns (or rosy initial cost estimates), but I don't think comparing London to Atlanta or Athens is going to work. Everything is a lot more expensive there and the scope for revenue are much greater. Consider that with the Emirates Stadium London has one the few wholly privately-funded stadiums that's been a succes, and it was hardly a cheap deal.
                            For Emirates, I can see it. But not an aquatics center. They are building a $600 million white elephant.
                            I came upon a barroom full of bad Salon pictures in which men with hats on the backs of their heads were wolfing food from a counter. It was the institution of the "free lunch" I had struck. You paid for a drink and got as much as you wanted to eat. For something less than a rupee a day a man can feed himself sumptuously in San Francisco, even though he be a bankrupt. Remember this if ever you are stranded in these parts. ~ Rudyard Kipling, 1891

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                            • #15
                              They need to come to Montreal and Toronto. We can teach them how to build white elephant stadiums but good.
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