Job search
Job Search
Latest news
More news: (showing 1 - 20 of 13970)           
UK only International

Zaha Hadid says design costs not to blame as Japan drops Olympic Stadium plans

By Jason Holland    17 Jul 2015
Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe has dropped Zaha Hadid's plans for Tokyo's Olympic Stadium / Zaha Hadid Architects

Just days after appearing to receive final government approval, Zaha Hadid’s plans for Tokyo’s Olympic Stadium have been dropped – but the architect says the project’s spiralling costs are not down to its design.

Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe said the project would now “start over from zero” with the decision taken after “listening to the voices of the people and the athletes”.

The estimated cost for the stadium had risen to $2bn (€1.8bn, £1.3bn) – almost double the original figure – when the Japanese government recently gave approval for the plans, but this sparked a public backlash and political battles over who would foot the bill.

The government appeared to place the blame on the stadium’s design as the main cause of the cost overruns. However, Zaha Hadid Architects said in a statement it was “not the case that the recently reported cost increases are due to the design, which uses standard materials and techniques well within the capability of Japanese contractors and meets the budget set by the Japan Sports Council”.

Instead, it said the “real challenge” had been “agreeing an acceptable construction cost against the backdrop of steep annual increases in construction costs in Tokyo and a fixed deadline”.

Abe took the decision to drop Zaha Hadid’s designs after a meeting with the chair of the Tokyo 2020 organising committee, Yoshiro Mori.

The actual appearance of the stadium has also been heavily criticised in the country, with a number of Japanese architects, including Toyo Ito and Fumihiko Maki, outspoken in their desire to see Zaha Hadid’s proposals scrapped.

“It is absolutely right that the benefits and costs of the new national stadium should be clearly and accurately communicated and understood by the public and decision-makers in Japan and we hope that this is one of the objectives of the review announced by the prime minister,” added Zaha Hadid Architects.

The stadium, which will form the centrepiece of the 2020 Olympics, won’t now be completed in time for the 2019 Rugby World Cup, as originally planned.

The prime minister has instructed his sports and Olympics ministers to start the process to select a new stadium design immediately – with a cheaper price tag top of the agenda. Sports minister Hakubun Shimomura said a new design would be chosen within six months.

Sign up for FREE ezines
Related news

Company profile

Company profile: Total Vibration Solutions Ltd (TVS Group)
TVS Group includes TVS Sports Surfaces, TVS Gym Flooring, TVS Play Surfaces and TVS Acoustics. Our business is balanced through a broad portfolio of solutions and a presence across multiple industries.
View full profile >
More company profiles

Featured Supplier

CoverMe extends matching service to personal training, rewriting how members and personal trainers connect
CoverMe, the global leader in fitness workforce management, today launches CoverMe PT, an on-demand personal training platform that connects the right personal trainer to the right client in under 10 seconds.
View full details >
More featured suppliers

Property & Tenders

Location: Stratford, East London.
Company: Lee Valley Regional Park Authority
Location: Y Felinheli, LL56 4QN
Company: Newmark
Location: Newhaven, Sussex
Company: EiA Real Estate
Location: Tutbury Castle, Staffordshire
Company: Savills
Location: Oxford
Company: University of Oxford
More properties & tenders

Diary dates

22-23 Jun 2026
WX Wakefield , Wakefield, United Kingdom
21-24 Sep 2026
The Langham Huntington Pasadena , Pasadena, United States
06-08 Oct 2026
Messe Stuttgart, Stuttgart, Germany
22-22 Oct 2026
QEII Conference Centre, London
More diary dates