Avoiding 'white elephants'in Pyeongchang after Winter Olympics

2018-03-19 17

South Korea, among other things,... spent nearly 110 million U.S. dollars just on the construction of a stadium for the 2018 Winter Games.
And now that the Games are over,... the question becomes: how does the country prevent these massive investments becoming the usual post-Olympic white elephants?
Won Jung-hwan reports.

The Olympics have been an economic boon for some host cities.
Los Angeles is estimated to have made more than 200 million dollars over the decades thanks to the Games, including the leftover facilities.
But the ugly fact is that the most Olympic buildings leave a legacy of debt and maintenance costs for underused buildings known as "white elephants."
That's something Pyeongchang wants to prevent.
As there's been a range of opinions about what to do with the facilities in Pyeongchang once the Games,... the organizers have decided to go with more modest plans, perhaps to their credit.

For example, after the closing of the Paralympics, workers will eventually tear down the 109-million-U.S.-dollar Pyeongchang Olympic Stadium.
It'll have been used just four times, but the organizers decided that this is one way Pyeongchang can avoid the "white elephants."


"I think it is a smart decision to demolish the main Pyeongchang stadium, considering the location is too isolated to use later. But plans for other venues should be made carefully to keep them operational because the demolition costs would be very high."

In fact, the local government has planned a way to efficiently use 9 out of the 12 sporting venues.


"We have already signed contracts with private companies for the use of those venues,… and we are also looking into some conditions for the use in the upcoming Asian Winter Games."

Nine venues will be reused by other parties, such as local governments and universities.
But really, the most effective way to prevent the "white elephant" problem at the Olympics would be a complete overhaul of the way the competition is run.


"It will be a good idea to promote winter sports so people use the venues after the Games. For example, there aren't many bobsleigh or skeleton tracks in Asia,… so if Jeongseon plans well, the venue could be used as a great facility for local and even international athletes."

Although Pyeongchang, like previous host cities, suffered significant cost overruns,… the organizers seem to have learned from the successes and failures of their predecessors.
Won Jung-hwan, Arirang News.