Thursday, October 24

Dispute centered round redevelopment of historic Tokyo park, iconic stadiums

TOKYO — About 1,500 timber have been minimize all the way down to construct the $1.4 billion National Stadium for the Tokyo Olympics.

Almost two years after the Games ended, the sleek stadium sits largely unused, has no main tenant, and will value taxpayers a reported $15 million yearly in repairs. In the interim, the Tokyo Games have been sullied by a string of bribery scandals and insider offers.

Building new sports services is once more on the coronary heart of a redevelopment plan for considered one of Tokyo’s most beloved inexperienced areas. And Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike is as the middle, as she was in selling the Olympics.

This time it’s a well-known baseball stadium and an adjoining rugby floor in a historic park space generally known as Jingu Gaien. The stadiums are to be razed and rebuilt, making means for a pair of almost 200-meter (650-foot) skyscrapers and a business makeover.

The undertaking highlights the ties among the many primary actors: the governor, the realty developer Mitsui Fudosan, and Meiji Jingu, a non secular group that owns a lot of the land to be redeveloped.

Koike, as different governors have been, is a member of the Meiji Jingu board of trustees. Hiromichi Iwasa, the previous chairman of Mitsui Fudosan, joined Meiji Jingu’s board of trustees after he took over the corporate in 2011. He stays a director of Mitsui Fudosan.


PHOTOS: Dispute centered round redevelopment of historic Tokyo park, iconic stadiums


“The apparent conflict of interest between businesses and policymakers rarely ever raises eyebrows here,” Koichi Nakano, a political scientist at Tokyo’s Sophia University, stated in an e-mail to The Associated Press.

The battle is sparsely coated by Japan’s mainstream newspapers, and an e-mail about it to Koike’s employees went unacknowledged.

Nakano termed as “very cozy” the connection between Mitsui Fudosan, Meiji Jingu, and politicians like Koike and former Prime Minister Yoshiro Mori.

Mori is the previous head of the the Japan Rugby Football Union, and was president of the Tokyo Olympic organizing committee till he resigned after making sexist feedback about girls. Nakano and others recommend Mori was doubtlessly a key conduit within the deal.

“The redevelopment of the park is obviously a public issue,” Nakano stated. “At the identical time, they (politicians) can declare that it’s a personal determination of a non secular group and the builders.

“But because Jingu Gaien is also a public park with sports facilities, politicians can – and do – meddle in the decisions. Which results in the cozy, probably collusive relationships among the insiders that are unaccountable to the public.”

The long-term undertaking will take greater than a decade to finish, however minor development has begun. Longtime residents say the undertaking is quietly being pushed by means of, and activists have filed a lawsuit to cease it.

Nakano additionally raised the difficulty of separation of state and faith. He stated non secular our bodies have been indifferent from the state after Japan’s defeat in World War II, however nonetheless have hidden “umbilical cords.”

The central query is who controls public house, and does the general public have a say? And have different plans been thought of? Intertwined are questions on preserving the 2 honored stadiums, and the encroachment on a 66-hectare (163-acre) park space designed 100 years in the past to honor the Meiji Emperor.

Opponents of the multi-billion greenback growth – an meeting of sports followers, preservationists and environmentalists – say Koike has the authority to cease the undertaking.

“We who love rugby do not want to be part of ‘sportswashing’ that destroys the environment under the guise of sports,” wrote Tsuyoshi Hirao, a former Japanese nationwide workforce rugby participant who teaches at Kobe Shinwa Women’s University.

Hirao heads considered one of a number of on-line petitions opposing the redevelopment, which have gathered greater than 250,000 signatures. The musician and composer Ryuichi Sakamoto additionally opposed the undertaking, outspoken about it till his demise on March 28.

Hirao and others say the rugby and baseball stadiums may very well be renovated, and a few query the necessity for extra high-rise towers in Tokyo, notably because the pandemic and altering work kinds. The metropolis has greater than 50 high-rises that exceed 187 meters (614 toes).

The inexperienced focus is on greater than 100, century-old gingko timber, 18 of which appear positive to be felled within the redevelopment. The metropolis says they may be transplanted.

Scientists concern others may very well be broken by the huge constructing undertaking. There are additionally questions over how a lot CO2 the inexperienced space will soak up after the redevelopment, crucial in a dense city warmth island like Tokyo.

“The redevelopment of the Jingu Gaien baseball stadium and the sacred Chichibu rugby stadium is being justified under the guise of making it more comfortable for spectators,” Hirao stated in an e-mail. “The redevelopment project is being carried out under the pretext of development of sport.”

The metropolis’s Environmental Assessment Committee has raised questions in regards to the growth, and a cross-party panel of 27 members of the nationwide parliament has appeared into the deal.

The new rugby venue could be an indoor, multi-purpose facility additionally used for concert events and different sports, with synthetic grass and diminished seating from 25,000 to fifteen,000.

“I don’t think a complex that occasionally hosts rugby matches can be called any longer a ‘sacred venue’ for rugby,” Hirao stated. “As most people believe, I also think that former Prime Minister Yoshiro Mori’s wishes are playing out.”

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Follow Japan-based AP Sports Writer Stephen Wade on Twitter at http://twitter.com/StephenWadeAP

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AP sports: https://apnews.com/hub/apf-sports and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

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