Prime Minister Wants Athens a Year-round Tourism Destination
Olympic installations will remain in the hands of the state and will leave a lasting legacy by making Attica a year-round tourist attraction and by upgrading the quality of life of local residents, Prime Minister Kostas Karamanlis said during a recent press call.
“In taking advantage of the Olympic legacy, our main goal is to strengthen Greece’s image abroad even further. To turn Attica into a year-round, attractive tourist destination. To attract foreign direct investment and know-how. And, above all, to significantly improve the quality of life of Athens area residents by offering better choices in sports, leisure and culture,” Mr. Karamanlis, who is also the culture minister, told the press corps.
The government’s concern is that the installations, according to Olympic Properties Director Christos Hadjiemmanouil, should not turn out to be white elephants. “We will thus seek to attract the interest of private investors while keeping most facilities open to the public,” he said.
But some of the installations will be used by the government, according to plans revealed during the press call. The former main press center, for example, will house part of the Environment and Public Works Ministry, while the wrestling arena at Ano Liossia will house dance, cinema, theater and music academies, as well as the future National Digital Museum.
Meanwhile, just five installations are said to be ready for public, international tenders. Officials would not say which, apart from the former sailing center at Aghios Kosmas. And there is at least one venue that has failed to attract the attention of either developers or people in the arts, and that is the Weightlifting Hall at Nikaia as it is not easy to access.
The Taekwondo Arena in Faliron will be converted into a big conference center, but most facilities will be used for sports and will be open to the public. For other installations, pending the expression of private interest, intentions are still vague. For example, part of the Markopoulo Equestrian Center will be turned into a theme park of some kind and a hotel may be built there.
Government officials stressed that there has been no undue delay in planning for the post-Olympic use of installations, adding that they will proceed in a transparent, law-abiding manner.