The Olympic Stadium and the Anatomy of Incompetence

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Katō Hideki [Profile]

Prime Minister Abe Shinzō has finally pulled the plug on a controversial Olympic stadium plan that seemed to epitomize irresponsible government spending, but the uproar is far from over. Katō Hideki, a former Ministry of Finance official and a longtime critic of Japan’s bureaucratic and political culture, analyzes the roots and implications of the stadium fiasco.

Opacity and Incongruity

The other fundamental problem with the process was the level of opacity, beginning with the design competition. While the sponsors spoke of drawing from a vast international pool of talent, in fact they drew only from among the winners of the five major international architecture awards, including the Pritzker Prize and the UIA (International Union of Architects) Gold Medal, thus excluding budding young talents from the competition. And while stressing public participation, they provided almost no explanation of the judging process, which was anything but transparent.

But when it came to building guidelines, the government was worse than opaque; it was arbitrary and inconsistent. When the guidelines were released in July 2012, land-use regulations already on the books set a maximum building height of 20 meters for the district in question, and a maximum of just 15 meters for the site of the stadium, which is part of the protected “scenic area” around Meiji Shrine. Yet the contest organizers made the maximum height of the stadium a full 70 meters, assuming the relevant statutes could easily be trashed to accommodate the structure. Tokyo’s urban plan was accordingly modified in June 2013, almost a year after the selection of the winning design.

The Gaien, or outer precinct, of Meiji Shrine, was planned as an integral element of the shrine complex dedicated to Emperor Meiji, and it was the first spot in Tokyo to be designated a “scenic area” subject to strict land-use regulations. Thanks to this designation, the nation has been able to preserve the unique history and scenic beauty of this site, with its ginkgo-lined avenue and its forest full of 100-year-old trees, making it one of the best known urban green spaces in Japan. This is the context in which the 15-meter limit was established.

Disregarding these regulations and their rationale, the JSC approved a towering, sprawling structure that would have covered almost the entire building plot, necessitating the clearing of many trees. In addition to its impact on the landscape, a facility designed to house tens of thousands of spectators would have posed serious safety problems given the difficulty of evacuating them from the site in the event of a disaster.

Symptoms of a Bigger Problem

The series of events leading up to Abe’s July 17 announcement have cost the nation dearly, but the structural problems they embody are far more serious.

The first of these is the practice of adopting and planning major national projects through various opaque, extralegal channels. Three years after the launch of the stadium project, the quantity and quality of information provided to the public is still woefully inadequate. This mode of operation makes a mockery of democracy.

The second issue is the persistence of an outdated proclivity for grandiose projects that ultimately serve no one’s practical interests, let alone the nation’s. Forgetting their original purpose, agencies like MEXT and the JSC function first and foremost to expand their own budgets, programs, and facilities, with politicians of the ruling party as their accomplices.

The third structural problem is an inability to change course, even when the gravity of their mistake becomes glaringly apparent. Japanese officials are so worried about angering their own superiors and colleagues that they never stop to think what damage—catastrophic in some cases—their inertia might cause the nation as a whole.

Sad to say, these are the very tendencies that historians have cited as key factors leading up to Japan’s entry into World War II.

In July Prime Minister Abe finally moved to pull the plug on this white elephant of a project. But trimming the costs involved in building the Olympic stadium will not solve the more fundamental problem. Policy makers who act in deference to the climate of opinion within their own closed circle are leading Japanese society to the brink of disaster. We need to treat the stadium fiasco as a wake-up call and stop this runaway train before it is too late.

(Originally written in Japanese and published on June 30, 2015. Banner photo: Model of the new national Olympic stadium approved by the Japan Sport Council. ©Jiji.)

Related Tags

sports MEXT National stadium Shimomura Hakubun Japan Sport Council Zaha Hadid

Katō HidekiView article list

President of the think tank Japan Initiative. Graduated from the Kyoto University Faculty of Economics and served in the Ministry of Finance until 1997, when he founded the Japan Initiative. Has served as a professor of policy management at Keiō University and secretary general of the Government Revitalization Unit under the Cabinet Office. Author of Ajia kakkoku no keizai/shakai shisutemu (Economic and Social Systems of East Asia), Kin’yū shijō to chikyū kankyō (Financial Markets and the Global Environment), and other works.

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