Speaking at a Suncorp Stadium media conference to mark the end of the IOC visit, Brisbane 2032 Organising Committee president Andrew Liveris appeared confident the government’s approach of attracting private funding would work.
“Now, what better site, right? That’s a great precinct, and that’ll be part of the legislation,” he said.
Liveris said there was no doubt Brisbane needed a new inner-city arena, which would replace the ageing Entertainment Centre at Boondall.
“This is a city that’s definitely grown up quite a lot, if I could use that term, but the absence of an arena or an entertainment complex was clearly being discussed at great length,” he said.
Brisbane 2032 Organising Committee chief executive Cindy Hook also weighed in.
“I don’t think we need that venue desperately for the Games, but gosh, if we add it and we’ve got some more options, I would love to see that,” she said.
Deputy Premier Jarrod Bleijie told parliament on Tuesday the private sector interest in building the arena had been “exciting”.
“That is why we are hitting the ground running, opening the process today to hear from the private sector about their vision and what they can do in that area,” he said.
Plans for the Brisbane Arena to be built at Roma Street have been scrapped.Credit: Queensland government
Another deviation from GIICA’s recommendations was the Crisafulli government’s decision to hold Olympic rowing on the Fitzroy River.
Rowing’s governing bodies have expressed concerns the river’s currents would not meet technical specifications.
Dubi said the decision might ultimately be taken out of the government’s hands.
“No one else than the federation can say ‘field of play ready’, but the collaboration is essential,” he said.
“…We have full confidence about the onboarding of the international federation [World Rowing] and getting their views to make the plan great one.”
For the visiting IOC officials, including president Thomas Bach, president-elect Kirsty Coventry and newly minted Brisbane 2032 Co-ordination Commission chair Mikaela “Mikee” Cojuangco Jaworski, this week marked their first in-country meetings with the Brisbane 2032 Organising Committee.
Jaworski, who replaced the promoted Coventry in the role earlier this month, said it was a homecoming of sorts, having spent much of her life in Australia for equestrian events.
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“I would regularly – once a year – be living on the Brisbane Showgrounds when I was competing there,” she said.
“Little did I imagine that I’d be sitting here now and, just seven years away, it’s going to be the heart of the Olympic and Paralympic Games as the Athletes’ Village.”
Of the existing venues, Jaworski said she was most impressed by the Gold Coast – and hoped some of the new minor venues across the state would learn from its example.
“We were at Carrara yesterday and I couldn’t help but marvel at how many people were using it, how many courts were available – it was so accessible, and the size of it was just something that I could imagine events being held there, the Games going on, there, people going through it,” she said.
“For me, the fact that it has local use and then will be used for the Olympic Games, allows me also to look forward into those that are being built, and seeing how they also have that same potential to be world-class and at the same time local.”
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