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Rio Olympics Venues Built With “No Planning”, Says Scathing Report

Many of the venues are empty, boarded up and have no tenants or income.

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A federal prosecutor looking into last year's Rio de Janeiro Olympics has said that many of the venues "are white elephants" that were built with "no planning."

The scathing report offered on Monday at a public hearing confirms what The Associated Press reported several months after the games ended. Many of the venues are empty, boarded up and have no tenants or income with the maintenance costs dumped on the federal government.

"There was no planning," Federal Prosecutor Leandro Mitidieri told the public hearing on the Olympics.

There was no planning when they put out the bid to host the Games. No planning. They are white elephants today. What we are trying to look at here is how to turn this into something usable.
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Rio de Janeiro spent about $12 billion to organise the games, which were plagued by cost-cutting, poor attendance, and reports of bribes and corruption linked to the building of some Olympic-related facilities.

The Olympic Park in suburban Barra da Tijuca, which was the largest cluster of venues, is an expanse of empty arenas with clutter still remaining from the games. The second largest cluster, in the northern area of Deodoro, is closed despite plans to open it as a public park with swimming facilities for the mostly poor who live in the area.

Patricia Amorim, the Undersecretary for sports in the city of Rio, said highly publicised plans were on hold to dismantle one arena and turn the remains into four schools. The arena was the venue for handball.

It will be dismantled. We are just waiting to know whether we will actually have resources to build these schools on other sites, or whether we will dismantle it and wait for the resources to come. Our schools need to be reformed and that’s our priority, not new schools.
Patricia Amorim, Undersecretary for Sports, Rio
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Nine months after the Rio Olympics ended, the local organising committee still owes creditors about $30 million, and 137 medals awarded during the games are rusting and need to be repaired.

Former Rio de Janeiro Mayor Eduardo Paes, the moving force with the International Olympic Committee behind organising last year's Olympics, is being investigated for allegedly accepting at least 15 million reals ($5 million) in payments to facilitate construction projects tied to the games.

He denies any wrongdoing.

Organising committee spokesman Mario Andrada said more than 100 medals awarded at the Olympics showed signs of rusting. He said many were bronze medals, and said many of the tarnished medals had been awarded to Americans.

Most of the problems were due to handling, poor handling. Either they fell on the floor or they were touching each other so, it was a problem of handling. Whatever was the problem with the poor handling, it took the gloss off the medal and then you see rusting.
Mario Andrada

He said the medals would be repaired at Brazil's mint called the Casa da Moeda.

He said more than 2,000 medals were awarded at the Olympics and said "several other games had problems with medals."

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