Delhi Main Stadium OK

Swanky remodelled Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium inaugurated

2010-07-27 17:40:06
Last Updated: 2010-07-27 18:37:32

New Delhi: The remodelled, 60,000 capacity Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium – showpiece venue for October’s Commonwealth Games – was finally inaugurated Tuesday after several missed deadlines.

The swanky venue, originally built for the 1982 Asian Games, was inaugurated by sports minister M.S. Gill in the presence of Delhi chief minister Sheila Dikshit and Commonwealth Games organising committee chief Suresh Kalmadi.

Aiyar wants Commonwealth Games to be ‘spoilt’

The stadium, refurbished at a cost of a whopping Rs.9.6 billion (approximately $200 million), will host the showpiece athletics, weightlifting and lawn ball disciplines. International consultants from six countries - Germany, Switzerland, UK, US, Mexico and Australia - put their heads together to construct the state-of-the-art facility.

Gill said that the government has finally completed the task of constructing the venues for the Games slated for Oct 3-14. All the venues will be handed over to the organising committee by Aug 1. The weightlifting venue, which is also inside the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium, is also ready and will be inaugurated in two-three days.

“We have now completed the responsibility of constructing the venues. Now we are waiting for the Games. Only the weightlifting venue is scheduled to be formally inaugurated. That is also ready and we will inaugurate it in the next couple of days,” said Gill.

Gill said that it was a complex engineering structure and the first of its kind in India. He congratulated all the engineers, designers and contractors for their hard work in completing the venue.

“When I took charge in 2008 and saw the stadium, I was worried, how it can be completed in time. But thanks to their effort that we have been able to do it. We will hand over all the stadiums to the organising committee by August 1 so that they can do the overlays work,” he said.

There are three independent structures of main stadium building - lower tier, main building and supporting structure for membrane roof. The earthquake resistant building has a two tier seating arrangement.

The training area will have nine sprint synthetic tracks and warm-up areas for throwing and the final warm-up synthetic track is inside the main stadium.

Among the important features of the stadium are high definition television transmission, state of art sports lighting and a specially designed underground tunnel for the opening and closing ceremonies.

But the most innovative feature of the stadium is the membrane cable roof which alone cost Rs.100 crore ($20 million). The membrane roof made of coated glass fibre is the largest in Asia. It has around 443 tonnes of pre-stretched cable with a length of 2,200 km.

The roof was built without any perpendicular support from inside the stadium. It has been built with new support extending up to 71 metres into the stands.

Gill went on to add that the deadlines were missed due to the last minute addition of a specially designed tunnel for the opening and the closing ceremony.

“We also had to build a tunnel for the ceremonies. So there were some changes when the work was going and it took some time for the work to be completed. But they have done a brilliant job. And the entire nation will be proud of this stadium. This is an important venue as it will host the opening and closing ceremony and am sure that it will be a dazzling show,” he said.

India in Sri Lanka

The deadline for completion of the venue has been changed several times since the Central Public Works Department (CPWD) began the construction work two years and seven months back.

The stadium is the last of the 11 games venues to be completed.

The venue is also home to the National Dope Test Laboratory, Sports Authority of India (SAI) headquarter and hostel.

Upside-down Commonwealth games
28 Jul 2010, 0620 hrs IST,ET Bureau

FROM THE ECONOMIST, INDIA

Swimming on the athletics track, water polo in the gymnasium, orgies on the hockey astroturf! It is perfectly understandable if these are some of
the nightmares suffered by not just the Commonwealth Games organisers but by the Delhi chief minister and Union minister for sports and youth affairs (pun unintended). When not telecasting images of leaking roofs, mountains of debris and stadia half-built and still-incomplete with just 67 days to go for the inauguration of the Commonwealth Games, the media has been highlighting allegations of sexual harassment of India’s women hockey players by the male coach.

So much so that Delhi Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit’s standard response to media queries these days is ‘Please leave us alone’. The only reassurance is from the games organising committee chairman Suresh Kalmadi who maintains that everything is hunky-dory and from the country’s urban development minister Jaipal Reddy who tells us that Indians excel at leaving things till the last minute and then doing a good job. It is an optimism that is, alas, not shared by Delhi chief minister, going by reports that she has threatened to blacklist contractors who do not complete their work on time or do a shoddy job.

New Delhi overlays seven cities that have come up in the past. So is it time to seek some inspiration from the mythological past? In the good old days of Indraprastha, builders of cities could rely on the divine architect Vishwakarma to design and complete palaces, stadia, etc a jiffy.

If nothing else, such an intervention could spare us both the televised wailing of those Cassandras who tell us now that India should never have bid for the Commonwealth Games or the never-say-die optimism of those Caesars who maintain that mega sporting events are just what the masses want, in a debate that resonates from the days of gladiator-sports in the Colosseum of ancient Rome!