2012 Olympic village has $442M shortfall
LONDON, Sept. 6 (UPI) -- London's 2012 Olympic village has a
$442 million funding shortfall that will have to be paid with public
money, a British newspaper reported Saturday.
The housing-market collapse has made the project non-viable
for business, The Guardian reported.
Government officials acknowledge they are poised to launch a
rescue package, the newspaper said.
"The Olympic Delivery Authority is doing all it can in
difficult circumstances, but the property crunch and the credit
crunch means we are looking at a funding gap of around 250 million
pounds for the athletes' village at the moment," a senior government
official told the newspaper.
The private sector was originally going to build more than
3,000 apartments for competitors on the Olympic campus in a $1.77
billion project.
The money will come from $16.5 billion in public funding set
aside to stage the games, the newspaper said.
Britain's Treasury is understood to want most of the $442
million to be found through cuts, the Guardian said.
Architects have already been ordered to cut the number of
apartments in the village by almost 1,000, which means five
athletes, rather than four, will share an apartment during the
games.
A number of high-rise blocks in the village have been
scrapped, the newspaper said.
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