this post was submitted on 17 Jul 2023
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That was definitely how it was sold, for sure. It seems to be rather less true in practice than it actually was stated, though. Among the works being done:
I'm actually pretty pro-Olympics in general, especially compared to the majority of the Brisbane threddiverse, but these specifically are problems that do bug me.
The Olympic Committee specifically asked for bids that emphasized no-budget-blowouts due to many previous Olympics essentially bankrupting cities and the bad rep that was causing to the Olympics brand, and Brisbane's bid was the only one that stacked up to scrutiny, is what I understand. So at least it wasn't just politicians by themselves blowing smoke up are collective arses for a change - there was some kind of scrutiny.
I think the Gabba is a special case. They have been wanting to expand/fix the Gabba district for ages - the two 4-lane roads on either side that the back of the stands over-hang has been a problem forever. Olympics has given them a chance to fix the whole thing, link it up with the river better. They put in the bus tunnels to fix access fairly recently. Adelaide Oval had similar growing pains - that stadium put in large sail structures back in the 2000's that were completely redone only 5 or 10 years later. The Gabba is a signature bit of infrastructure in the inner city worth doing - they will probably use it for big concerts and so on. The whole of the inner Brisbane city is coming along nicely, Southbank and bikeway upgrades and bridges, docks - it's getting there.
The Olympics aren't the Commonwealth games, it's a global audience - think commonwealth games + china, north and south america, the rest of Europe. And Brisbane is an obscure city on the world stage, but has amazing weather and natural tourists attraction, theme parks - I think Brisbane will get value for money, put it on the map.
That's true, but the criticism from people opposed to the Olympics is that this was purely a PR exercise and that in reality there's no serious effort being made to avoid budget blowouts and huge spectacle just like previous Olympics.
Personally, I think this aspect is somewhere in the middle. It's not going to blow out as much as past Olympics have, but nor is it being done up to the best hopes people had when hearing the intent of a lower-impact Olympics.
I think Brisbane was the only one that really even tried to put in a serious bid. Nobody else really wanted to.
Definitely true. But I'm not sure people were expecting a complete demolition and rebuild, followed by more major refurbishments post-Olympics. Is the entire rebuild necessary regardless of the Olympics? I don't know enough about stadia to say.
True, but I don't think there are really plans to fix this. The new rail (CRR) and bus (Metro) options are nice, but the whole area could use some major road dieting too, and as far as I'm aware that's not on the cards.
Unfortunately without that road dieting, walking and cycling are still not going to be very appealing options from the Gabba. It's certainly possible to link up with the river currently, but it's not pleasant, and none of the proposed changes I've heard of will change that. I will be very happy to be wrong there though.
RIP Taylor Swift fans.
For sure. I could not agree more with former Councillor Jonathan Sriranganathan when he says "we should start by recognising that we are already Australia’s greenest major city. This is a key strength we could build upon as the world’s eyes turn towards us." (while I disagree with his stance that we should simply not have the Olympics at all). Our greenery and wildlife should be what Brisbane leans into in creating its "brand" for the Olympics.
From the image in this link: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-02-17/gabba-stadium-redevelopment-funding-2032-olympics-infrastructure/101988206
...looks to me like they will be linking the river by sinking the roads surrounding and capping them with pedestrian walking areas, or some of them anyway . $2.7 billion price tag. The walkway links look like they are trying to give access to southbank/ the rocks but also river frontage at Mowbrow Park on other side of Kangaroo point.
With the Gabba I think it's all about increasing the oval size and stand capacity so they can complete with other large stadiums in Australia for events.
Here's another article: https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2023/feb/17/brisbane-2032-olympics-live-arena-gabba-rebuild-redevelopment-queensland
...which says the proposed new stadium will only add another 8000 seats. There's also pics of an alternate and cheaper proposal to have demountable stadium then reuse the materials from that after games for other infrastructure. Insteresting.
There is a nice pedestrian connection planned over Main St, but I'm not seeing any proposed changes to Stanley St or Vulture St, or anything west of the CRR Gabba station, which would be required to make the connection to Southbank nice.
Honestly I'm not really sure this is it. Taylor Swift isn't coming here on this tour, but supposedly if she had come it would have been to Lang Park, not the Gabba. She's playing at an NRL stadium in Sydney and a cricket/AFL one in Melbourne. I don't think stadium size is the reason for not coming, and I doubt it is for any other events.