Olympic legacy chief: Keep 80,000-seat stadium for World Cup bid

Future role: the Stratford stadium should keep its 80,000-seat capacity to enable it to host World Cup games in 2018, Margaret Ford, left, the new head of the Olympic legacy body, said today. It would be "an iconic offer for London," she added
5 April 2012

The woman who has the job of creating a legacy for the Olympic Park is to propose a shake-up of the plans for the main stadium.

As the newly appointed head of the Olympic legacy company, Margaret Ford signalled a likely U-turn by saying the venue should keep its 80,000 seats rather than being reduced to 25,000 after the 2012 Olympic Games.

She raised the prospect of the stadium hosting matches at the 2018 World Cup as part of an "iconic offer for London" if England's bid for the event is successful.

Baroness Ford, an urban regeneration expert who became chairwoman of London Partnership in 2002 and took the Millennium Dome off the taxpayers' hands by selling it to AEG, said she was convinced the "beautiful" stadium could pay its way as an all-year "visitor attraction".

The mother of three from Edinburgh, who was made a Labour peer in 2006, is said by former colleagues to "know in her bones how the public-sector machine works".

In another departure from the venue's original post-2012 proposals, she looks set to scrap plans to build a specialist sports school in the stadium.

In her first interview in the new role, she said: "I'd like to think about what we can do in terms of a really strong visitor attraction to the park. At the moment that doesn't quite sing out to me from the masterplanning that's been done with the stadium in particular."

Lady Ford, 51, began work a month ago as the £95,000-a-year chair of the soon-to-be-formed Olympic legacy company and is answerable to the Mayor and the Government. Working with her American chief executive, Andrew Altman, she will be a key player in realising the wider ambitions of the Olympics.

Among her main tasks will be to sell land to recoup about £600 million spent by the London Development Agency on buying the 600-hectare Olympic site, effectively returning the proceeds to the taxpayer over a 30-year period.

She added: "People you talk to say that what is needed is a much stronger sporting legacy there and I want to work very closely so that what we leave there is a knockout sporting legacy. There's a lot of work to be done around how we use the facilities.

"For example there's no accommodation for elite athletes who want to come to the park and train. The Lea Valley Regional Authority (neighbouring the Olympic Park) has done a great partnership with the Youth Hostel Association which is absolutely perfect."

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