Leisure Opportunities
Job search
Job Search
see all jobs
Latest job opportunities
Everyone Active
27,635
Stowmarket
English Heritage
£30,190 - £32,636pa + matched pension + benefits
Home-based with countrywide travel
star job
Brentwood School Sports Centre
£32,000 - £34,000pa + pension + benefits
Brentwood, Essex

Japan Sports Council reveals cost of abandoning Zaha Hadid's Tokyo stadium design

Job opportunities
Brentwood School Sports Centre
£32,000 - £34,000pa + pension + benefits
location: Brentwood, Essex, United Kingdom
more jobs
We were so happy to get that project, it was a well deserved win and we were looking forward to 2020. That was pulled away from us. We found the whole experience incredibly distressing.
– Patrik Schumacher, director at Zaha Hadid Architects
Credit: Zaha Hadid Architects

The body in charge of organising Tokyo’s Olympic Games has admitted its decision to cancel Zaha Hadid Architects’ (ZHA) National Olympic Stadium design in favour of a cheaper alternative has already cost it ¥68.6bn (US$650.6m, €582.4m, £497m) in compensation payouts.

According to media reports in the country, the Japan Sports Council (JSC) announced it has already earmarked the sum – ¥600m US$5.8m, €5.2m, £4.4m) higher than the amount estimated by the sports ministry in August 2015 – to cancel the original construction project.

The Tokyo Reporter and ANN News claim the unrecoverable figure includes a ¥1.39bn (US$13.5m, €12.1m, £10.3m) payment to ZHA to cover stadium design fees and the cost of closing their Tokyo office. Four other companies, including Japanese architects Nikken Sekkei, have received ¥3.8bn (US$37.1m, €33.2m, £28.3m) in design costs, while engineering firms Taisei Corp and Takenaka Corp have received ¥777m (US$7.6m, €6.8m, £5.8m).

It remains to be seen whether the payment will put an end to the acrimonious saga, which began when ZHA were dropped from the Olympic Stadium project, despite winning an international design competition. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said the cost of the stadium – which had been criticised by Japanese architects including Toyo Ito and Fumihiko Maki – had “just ballooned too much” after almost doubling to US$2bn (€1.79bn, £1.52bn).

A succession of skirmishes followed, with ZHA issuing a robust defence of their design, blaming the cost increases on Japan's overheated construction market and the tendering process for the building, in which contractors were appointed before they submitted cost estimates.

"Our warning was not heeded that selecting contractors too early in a heated construction market and without sufficient competition would lead to an overly high estimate of the cost of construction,” they said.

In December 2015, Kengo Kuma was selected to design the stadium within a budget of ¥155bn (US$1.5bn, €1.3bn, £1.1bn). That decision also prompted anger, with ZHA saying his design shared similarities with theirs – an accusation he has flatly denied.

Summarising the saga in an interview with Sports Management's sister publicationCLAD, ZHA director Patrik Schumacher said: “It was the biggest setback ever. I found it absolutely shocking and Zaha was devastated. We were so happy to get that project, it was a well deserved win and we were looking forward to 2020. That was pulled away from us. We found the whole experience incredibly distressing.

“It was such a humiliation. The loss of two years intense, passionate work, not to mention the guys flying to Japan all of the time. You can only do that if you have that reward in sight.

“Everyone was depressed and demoralised, and there was also the potential shock to our reputation – the perception that this was due to our obstinacy or outrageous extravagance in terms of the design. None of this was true, but the suspicion lingers on in the minds of clients. That's why we made a PR effort to try to explain what happened and how conscientious we'd been in the process, signalling all the way through until the final decision that we were totally willing to do anything.”

Kuma told CLAD that communication problems were to blame for the controversy. “I think it’s a problem in Japan,” he said. “For foreign architects to work in Japan is not easy because the system is totally different and the language barrier exists between Japanese and the foreigners. Zaha was very much frustrated with that kind of miscommunication and I understand that difficulty.”

Construction on Kuma’s Olympic Stadium is set to begin in the coming months and is due to be completed by November 2019.

It will host the opening and closing ceremonies for the 2020 Games, as well as athletics, rugby and football fixtures.

Sign up for FREE ezines, news alerts & magazines
Related news

Kengo Kuma hits back in Tokyo 2020 stadium row

15 Jan 2016
The architect developing Japan’s National Stadium for the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games has publicly refuted ...

Zaha Hadid refuses to hand over copyright to Tokyo 2020 stadium design

14 Jan 2016
Zaha Hadid Architects (ZHA) have claimed the Japan Sports Council are withholding payment for the ...

Zaha Hadid cries foul as Tokyo 2020 stadium design is chosen

22 Dec 2015
Japanese architects Kengo Kuma have been selected to design the 80,000 capacity stadium which will ...
The body in charge of organising Tokyo’s Olympic Games has admitted its decision to cancel Zaha Hadid Architects’ (ZHA) National Olympic Stadium design in favour of a cheaper alternative has already cost it ¥68.6bn (US$650.6m, €582.4m, £497m) in compensation payouts.
CLD,SAR,ARC,DES,DEV,PHR
THUMB13194_92635.jpg

More News

1 - 15 of 69,634
24 Jun 2026
Preventive healthcare company Neko Health has added body composition analysis to its full-body health scan and launched a new mobile app that integrates wearable data ... More
24 Jun 2026
Chequan Lewis is the new CEO of Crunch Fitness, taking over from Jim Rowley, who has transitioned to be executive chair.  Lewis joined the company ... More
23 Jun 2026
Sea Lanes Canary Wharf has officially opened. The 50-metre, six-lane pool, which uses the natural water of the dock, offers year-round open water swimming in ... More
23 Jun 2026
London-based high-performance fitness club, ONE LDN, is raising funds for a multi-site expansion across London, the UK, and Europe over the next five years. Founded ... More
23 Jun 2026
The Standards Authority for Touch in Cancer Care (SATCC) charity has announced its first five-day Living with Cancer and Beyond retreat, which will be held ... More
23 Jun 2026
After some delays, work on Newcastle’s £28.9 million wellness centre at West Denton is underway and scheduled for completion in late 2027.  FaulknerBrowns Architects, which ... More
23 Jun 2026
Expo 2030 Riyadh is being planned as a permanent visitor destination, with organisers confirming the six-million-square-metre site will become a Global Village after the event ... More
22 Jun 2026
A new brain clinic has opened in London, which uses non-invasive brain stimulation to treat chronic pain, anxiety and burnout at the neurological source. Naya ... More
22 Jun 2026
Palazzo di Varignana, in the Emilia Romagna region of Italy, has created a new tailored health programme designed specifically for families. Families with young children ... More
22 Jun 2026
Good Boost’s digital exercise programmes are helping adults with MSK at a lower cost than physiotherapy, according to a study carried out by the University ... More
22 Jun 2026
Patmos Aktis, a Luxury Collection Resort and Spa, has opened in Greece, with a renovated and rebranded wellness offering called Ansana Wellness and Spa. The ... More
22 Jun 2026
With Prime Minister, Keir Starmer, announcing his resignation this morning and Andy Burnham as a possible successor, the fitness, health and wellness sector is evaluating ... More
22 Jun 2026
Koru Health Club launched recently within Luxembourg’s multi-experience destination, GRID X, which combines culture, retail and hospitality. The club combines high-end sports facilities with a ... More
22 Jun 2026
The Mauna Kea Beach Hotel, an Autograph Collection property in Hawaii, US, has opened its 22,000 sq ft indoor-outdoor Spa at Mauna Kea as the ... More
22 Jun 2026

The owner of one of Australia's best-known waterparks has acquired a major competitor, creating a new attractions business spanning two of the country's ... More

1 - 15 of 69,634