With six months to go, 2026 Winter Games organisers say they'll be ready

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A local resident cycling past the Milano-Cortina 2026 Olympic Village construction site, in Milan on July 31, 2025. The Winter Olympic Games Milano-Cortina 2026 will take place from Feb 6 to 22 and the Winter Paralympic Games from March 6 to 22, 2026.

Organisers have made a point of delivering a low-cost Winter Games after recent extravangances.

PHOTO: AFP

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Six months before the start of the Winter Olympics, Italian organisers say that, after years of ups and downs, they are on schedule.

“Preparations are progressing steadily and according to the timeline we have set,” Andrea Varnier, the chief executive officer of Milano-Cortina 2026 Olympic and Paralympic Organising Committee, told AFP.

The Olympic opening ceremony is on Feb 6, though curling kicks off the action two days earlier. The Paralympics open on March 6, and curling again breaks the ice two days beforehand.

“We are currently in the core phase of operational implementation,” said Varnier.

Simico, the public company responsible for delivering the Olympic facilities, last week promised that “all the planned sports construction projects will be completed before the start of the Olympics”.

Organisers have made a point of delivering a low-cost Winter Games after recent extravagances.

Sochi, in Russia in 2014, cost at least US$40 billion (S$51 billion). Pyeongchang, in South Korea in 2018, came in at over US$12 billion. The Covid-hit Games in Beijing in 2022 officially cost $US4 billion, but financial analysts said that including infrastructure costs put the total at around US$38 billion.

Milano-Cortina estimate their final bill will be €5.2 billion ($7.7 billion). Of that, €3.5 billion is for infrastructure and 1.7 billion on staging the Games.

They are using several existing venues – including the closing ceremony in the 2,000-year-old Roman amphitheatre in Verona. They say that avoiding new construction reduces not only costs but also environmental impact.

This approach also means the Games will stretch across northern Italy from Cortina in the east 350 kilometres to the western suburbs of Milan, with other “clusters” spread through the Alps.

“As with any complex global event, challenges are part of the process,” said Varnier. “We are moving forward with confidence.”

One of the few new venues will be briefly the Milano Santa Giulia Ice Hockey Arena, before assuming its intended role as the multi-purpose Eventim Arena after the Games.

While organisers have managed to avoid being lumbered with a little-used speed-skating track by temporarily converting two exhibition halls at the Milan fair grounds, another group of sports with few participants created a political and construction headache.

Because Italy did not have a track for the bobsleigh, luge and skeleton events, organisers considered using existing sites in Austria or Switzerland.

Matteo Salvini, the second-in-command and Minister of Transport in Giorgia Meloni’s hard-right government, insisted in late 2023 that the events be held in Italy.

That meant a breakneck race to build a track in Cortina. It was completed just in time for pre-approval in March.

Accommodation, which often poses a logistical and financial problem for Olympic organisers, seems to be locked up.

The Milan Village, six seven-storey buildings to be converted into university dorms after the Games, will be delivered in “early October” despite the recent legal troubles of its developer, the Coima group.

In Cortina, 377 prefabricated modules will be installed by the end of October.

That leaves just one unknown. The Italian meteorological service, contacted by AFP, said it was unable to predict whether there would be enough snow next February.

The organisers said they were not worried.

“We’ll be ready,” they said. AFP

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