Courtesy Zaha Hadid Architects
Today's stadiums are architectural feats of design that can elevate the senses, capture the spirit of a community, and become an icon of the city long after a sports event ends. Celebrity Iraqi-born British architect, Zaha Hadid's design for the 2020 Olympic stadium in Tokyo won an international competition, but has received criticism. Japanese architect, Arata Isozaki described it as, "A turtle waiting for Japan to sink so that it can swim away." The 83-year-old warned: "Tokyo will surely be burdened with a gigantic white elephant." Not all new stadiums receive such objections.
Courtesy Zaha Hadid Architects
"While the New National Stadium in Tokyo will be used for the 2020 Olympic Games, the stadium is being built to host the widest variety of events in the future. Its first major international event will actually be as a venue for Japan's hosting of the 2019 Rugby World Cup -- the first country in Asia to host the event," said Jim Heverin, director at Zaha Hadid Architects which designed the arena. "The key to a successful stadium is to design for these long term requirements, rather than the one-off event such as the Olympics."
Courtesy Tomaz Gregoric/Ofis Architects
Here, the distinctive "spotty" Borisov Arena in Belarus is home to the country's football team. The space-age arena opened earlier this year and cost $37 million.
Courtesy Tomaz Gregoric/Ofis Architects
"The shape of the arena works perfectly both in terms of acoustics, as well as creating an introverted atmosphere," said designer Spela Videcnik, from Ofis Architects. "This introversion helps players to focus on a match, and the acoustics create a great supporting atmosphere."
Courtesy GMP Architekten
Built for this year's World Cup in Manaus, Brazil, the Amazon Arena's reptilian facade was inspired by wildlife in the surrounding rainforest.
Courtesy GMP Architekten
"If you look into the structures of nature like a leaf, or the skin of a snake, there's always a logical system behind it," explained stadium designer Hubert Nienhoff, of GMP Architects.
Courtesy GMP Architekten
"We're not in direct dialogue with the supporters," said Nienhoff. "But we have to understand their social and cultural background, the region and its history. That way we capture the whole spirit of the place."
Courtesy GMP Architekten
Nienhoff also designed the Moses Mabhida Stadium in Durban, for the 2010 South African World Cup.
Courtesy GMP Architekten
"The mayor asked us for something that would 'put Durban on the map,'" said Neinhoff.
Realmadrid.com
His architecture firm is also behind the $500m redevelopment of Real Madrid's home -- the Estadio Santiago Bernabeu.
Realmadrid.com
"We were inspired by medieval cathedrals, with all their sculptures and paintings around the building telling their stories," architect Volkwin Marg told CNN.
Realmadrid.com
Housing a retail area, restaurants and hotel among the attractions under its metallic membrane, the multipurpose arena will transform a stadium where construction began 70 years ago.
Courtesy Zaha Hadid Architects
Hadid's firm is also behind the 2020 World Cup stadium in Qatar. "The local Al Wakrah football team has been consulted throughout the design development by the client, as they will be the users of the stadium for generations after the 2020 Qatar World Cup," said Heverin.
Courtesy Zaha Hadid Architects
"There remains an ancient desire of humans to congregate together to watch others perform," said Jim Heverin, director at Zaha Hadid Architects. "So in many ways a stadium still needs to perform the same function as the Colosseum, and in many ways the success of future stadiums will be the ability to maintain the sense of collective congregation and a shared experience, whilst incorporating new demands."
Courtesy BERGER Arquitectos
Shortlisted in the sports category at this year's World Architecture Festival, the Luanda Multisports Pavilion, in Angola may not appear particularly striking during the day...
Courtesy BERGER Arquitectos
... but at night its exterior panels light up in an ever-changing kaleidoscope of colors. "More important then capturing the spirit of a country or city, is to be able to read the dreams and hopes of its inhabitants," designers, Berger Architects, said of $90 million building.
Courtesy Arup Associates
Winner of the sports category at this year's World Architecture Festival, the $1.3 billion Singapore Sports Hub features a 55,000-seater stadium, swimming pool complex and water sports facilities.
Courtesy Arup Associates
"I don't think anyone had really designed a successful stadium for the tropics before," said architect Clive Lewis of Arup Assocites. "In the past, if they had a tropical rainstorm they pretty much had to cancel the event. And that's where the dome roof concept came from."
Courtesy Marcus Bredt/GMP Architekten
One of the biggest challenges for a stadium is to continue surviving the community long after a major sports event has ended. The Olympic Stadium in Berlin was originally constructed for the 1936 Games.
Courtesy Fritz Busam/GMP Architekten
It was later redeveloped by GMP Architects and opened in 2004, eventually hosting games during the 2006 World Cup.

Story highlights

Zaha Hadid's ultramodern design for the Olympic stadium for Tokyo 2020 has been heavily criticized

Rival groups have proposed alternatives to the huge and costly design

But a Japanese official says it is likely the design will be retained

Tokyo CNN  — 

Japan appears set to proceed with a controversial design – likened by some critics to a giant bike helmet – for its centerpiece stadium for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, despite heated objections to the project, an official said Wednesday.

Furthermore, the cost of the project is now predicted at 250 billion yen ($2.02 billion) – a huge rise from the 162 billion yen ($1.31 billion) proposed earlier.

Iraqi-British architect Zaha Hadid’s ultramodern design for the stadium, selected as the winner of an international competition, will be significantly larger and more expensive than its recent predecessors, and has faced scathing criticism since it was unveiled.

In an open letter to the government body in charge of the games last year, leading Japanese architect Arata Isozaki said the sight left him “in despair” and warned the stadium would be a “disgrace to future generations.”

The project has seen budget cuts, design revisions, demolition delays and serious cost blowouts since it was unveiled, as material and construction costs have soared.

Amid concerns over the design’s cost, sustainability and its suitability to its surrounds – in the outer gardens of Tokyo’s Meiji Shrine, on the site of the stadium used for the 1964 Olympics – rival groups have proposed alternatives to the Hadid design.

Courtesy Zaha Hadid Architects
Tokyo Olympic Stadium, designed by Zaha Hadid, artist impression.

One group, led by Pritzker Prize-winning architect Fumihiko Maki, who designed the Tokyo gymnasium for the 1964 Olympics, favors altering Hadid’s design by removing two of its trademark arches running the length of the stadium. In this way, the group claimed it could reduce the cost of the stadium significantly.

“The biggest problem overall is the cost and the length of construction,” the group said in a statement.

Another group has advocated retrofitting the existing stadium for the 1964 Olympics – a solution advocated by Jeff Kingston, an Asian studies professor at Tokyo’s Temple University.

Kingston has been an outspoken critic of the stadium, which he described to CNN as a multi-billion dollar “white elephant waiting to happen.”

“There are very few events that will require such a massive stadium, one that blights one of Tokyo’s greenbelts,” he said. “For a fraction of the cost they could have retrofitted the old stadium that requires far less maintenance than the new facility. So taxpayers will be handed a gift that keeps on taking.”

Further more, he said, the “glitzy and garish” design “tramples on Japanese aesthetics.”

“Hadid’s curse will be a burden for decades to come,” he said.

On Tuesday, Education Minister Hakubun Shimomura, whose ministry is overseeing the event, hinted that an alternative design could be considered if it could realistically be implemented ahead of the 2019 deadline. Japan plans to use the stadium when it hosts the Rugby World Cup that year.

But on Wednesday, Yukio Yamamoto, an official at the ministry’s Sports and Youth Bureau, appeared to pour cold water on the idea.

“The ministry is planning to stay with Zaha’s plan as of now,” he said, as it was unlikely changes could be made and still make the deadline.

He said the original design had already undergone alterations to reduce costs – but the controversial arches would be retained, otherwise the design would no longer be Hadid’s.

Yamamoto said a final decision on the stadium had yet to be made, but one was likely by the start of July.