Posted Mar 4, 2011, 1:09 PM
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Quote:
FIFA: ‘We will have a new facility to play in’
Mayor ‘confident’ stadium will be ready should Ottawa be a host city for Women’s World Cup
By Joanne Chianello, The Ottawa Citizen March 4, 2011
— Mayor Jim Watson vowed that Frank Clair Stadium will be refurbished in time for the FIFA Women’s World Cup in 2015 in the likely event that Ottawa is chosen as one of the host cities of the international event.
“We will have a new facility to play in,” said the mayor. “I’m not going to set ourselves up for failure or embarrassment.”
FIFA officially announced Thursday that Canada would host the World Cup in 2015 and the Women’s U-20 World Cup in 2014, which is considered something of a practice run for the main event.
But Ottawa isn’t automatically a host city. The Women’s World Cup will be held in six cities across Canada, but seven have applied, including Vancouver, Montreal, Halifax, Edmonton, Winnipeg and Moncton, N.B.
Having said that, it would be a major blow if Ottawa wasn’t one of the chosen cities. The city already successfully hosted seven games during the Men’s U-20 World Cup in 2007, receiving kudos from FIFA at the time.
Halifax does not currently have an appropriate stadium for the soccer championships and Toronto didn’t bid because the world cup would clash with the Pan AM Games that will be held around the same time.
The fact that Toronto isn’t in the running works in Ottawa’s favour, said Watson, because the capital will receive all of the $2.75 million in provincial funding that’s expected, if not yet officially committed.
Last month, city council officially committed its own funds of $400,000 to the event.
“I wouldn’t have brought the request to council if I wasn’t confident that we were going to meet our commitment to have the facility ready,” said Watson, who campaigned last fall on aggressively working to attract sports, entertainment and cultural events to Ottawa.
The Lansdowne Park redevelopment, undertaken by the Ottawa Sports and Entertainment Group in partnership with the city, will see commercial and residential construction on the site as well as the refurbishment of the stadium.
The Men’s U-20 World Cup in 2007 is one of the last times the stadium’s south-side stands were used. Soon after the event, the lower section of the stands were found to be structurally unsound and have since been demolished.
The stadium is currently scheduled to be refurbished by June 2013, in time for the women’s U-20 in 2014. Demolition is slated to start in May, but that date seems unlikely considering a court case challenging the legality of the entire Lansdowne project is due to start next month. No work can begin on the site until the court case is decided.
But there are other big projects that will be under way over the next few years that may impact the games, including the tearing up of Bank Street in the Glebe.
There again Watson promised the city would have its act together.
“There’s been a lot of foot dragging” on the Bank Street reconstruction, he said, adding that part of the project could have technically started this year, but is more likely to go ahead in one full shot in 2012.
“Obviously, we don’t want road construction taking place in 2014,” he said.
The 2015 Women’s World Cup is set to be bigger than ever, growing to 24 participating countries from 16 this year. About 52 games are scheduled to be played.
The two soccer events combined are expected to attract as many as 30,000 out-of-town visitors generate more than $12 million of economic activity as soccer fans stream into local restaurants and book hotels.
The latter may be something of an issue, however. This week, Ottawa Convention Centre chairman Jim Durrell warned that Ottawa doesn’t have enough hotel rooms to support the new centre, which is booking up quickly.
Watson admitted that there’s work to be done attracting another hotelier to Ottawa, but that “it’s a good problem to have.”
The city will now concentrate on preparing to “roll out the red carpet” for FIFA and Canadian Soccer Association officials who will be touring the seven applicant cities in the fall. The host cities are expected to be announced late this year or in early 2012.
FIFA officials will consider all the activities planned for Ottawa in 2014 and 2015.
“We’ll be sitting down with them to make sure they’re comfortable with some of the projects that might be going on in parallel,” said Saad Bashir, the city’s director of economic development. “They might be OK with it, or they may request us to change our timeline so they’re not a big disruption happening during those dates.”
Watson was quick to add that FIFA’s requests had to be within reason.
“Obviously we’re not going to postpone construction on the light rail project,” said Watson.
The news that Canada would hold the Women’s World Cup was widely expected after Zimbabwe, the only other country vying to host the quadrennial event, pulled out this week.
© Copyright (c) The Ottawa Citizen
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