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Kingston Mayor: National Stadium Unsafe, Should Be Closed"

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  • Kingston Mayor: National Stadium Unsafe, Should Be Closed"

    IPL conducts independent survey of Stadium
    BY DANIA BOGLE Observer staff reporter
    Thursday, March 25, 2010

    LOCAL engineer Tommy Leow-Chin yesterday conducted an inspection of the National Stadium at the behest of its operators, Independence Park Limited (IPL), after officials from the Kingston and St Andrew Corporation (KSAC) raised concerns about the structural integrity of the facility.
    "He (Leow-Chin) is one of the foremost structural engineers in the country," IPL's general manager Major Desmon Brown told the Observer.

    MCKENZIE... called National Stadium ‘death trap’


    City Engineer Norman Shand and a KSAC team which included Kingston mayor Desmond McKenzie, conducted an inspection of the facility a few weeks ago and in a report dated March 19, noted several concerns with the grandstand section of the facility.

    "There was evidence of cracks in the slabs and beams on the cantilever," Shand told the Observer.

    "There was also patchwork of cement work in certain areas, rusting and other signs where there seem to be leaks and watermarks which suggest the cracks may be from the outside," he added.

    McKenzie, in an interview with the Observer, in the meantime, called the stadium a "death trap" and said the significance of this week's 'Champs 100' celebration was the only reason it was being allowed to go ahead.
    While in disagreement with McKenzie's pronouncement, Brown requested an independent inspection of the National Stadium.

    The former army man has himself called the Stadium archaic and pointed out that all other stadia of its kind had long since been demolished.

    Brown, who has made a case for a new stadium with modern facilities, possibly in the Caymanas area of St Catherine, pointed out that despite its current issues, the National Stadium was considered "state-of-the-art" when it was built in 1962.

  • #2
    Burrell: Stadium Closure Would Hurt JFF

    Burrell: Stadium closure will hurt JFF
    BY SEAN A WILLIAMS Assistant Sport Editor
    Thursday, March 25, 2010

    LOCAL football boss Captain Horace Burrell says Kingston Mayor Desmond McKenzie's order that no further "major sporting event" be staged at the National Stadium for the remainder of 2010 has thrown a wrench in plans to host a number of friendly matches at the venue.

    "We have no other option but to respect the view of the KSAC in this matter. We are now in a wait-and-see mode to see how we will proceed. We were in talks with a number of countries for friendly games to be held here since our last game was held overseas," Burrell said yesterday.

    BURRELL... We were in talks with a number of countries for friendly games

    According to him, the cash-strapped JFF can ill-afford at this time to play their international matches elsewhere, as the National Stadium in the nation's capital of Kingston has long been established as the fortress of the Reggae Boyz and a potential big-money earning venue.

    "The National Stadium is the primary venue for staging football international games, but based on what we are hearing now, it's difficult to plan," said the Jamaica Football Federation (JFF) president.

    Having successfully staged games in January and February, the JFF's game-a-month mission appears set to hit a bump and miss March, but the governing body of local football was aggressively hunting matches for the month of April and beyond.

    Though Mayor McKenzie did not single out international football matches as one of the events "that are not suitable" to be staged at 'The Office', it is reasonable to assume that as the Reggae Boyz have been known to pull massive crowds to the venue.

    Speaking at the Observer's weekly Monday Exchange at the newspaper's Beechwood Avenue headquarters, Mayor McKenzie said the only reason he has allowed the ongoing ISSA GraceKennedy Boys' and Girls' Atheltic Championships to go on is "because of the importance" of the event, which is celebrating its centenary year.

    The tough-talking mayor had suggested that the National Stadium, built in 1962, was no longer suitable for the events that are held there and said his organisation will be forced to close it until the required work by its managers, Independence Park Limited (IPL), is done to bring the facility in train with city requirements.

    "Its (National Stadium) structural competence is seriously in doubt," McKenzie said as he addressed reporters and editors at Monday's meeting.

    "Some piecemeal approach was made by the authorities at the National Stadium, but we are not satisfied," he added.

    The mayor reminded reporters that in 2008 he had threatened to close the National Stadium due to what was deemed the failure of the IPL "to comply with the safety regulations that were set out, not only by the KSAC, but all the other (relevant) agencies".

    With cracks identified in the slabs and beams of the cantilever, the KSAC fears the worst, especially in the case of of an earthquake.

    "We're going to be monitoring to ensure that the problems that exist be corrected. There are serious infringements in the structure of the National Stadium that leaves much to be desired," said McKenzie.

    Comment


    • #3
      This really going to put a dent in the JFF plans for one major match a month.

      Note McKenzie said that Champs 100 was only given the go ahead because it was significant.

      Burrell better line up teams of significance like Brazil and Germany.

      Comment


      • #4
        why? dem a lay match deh? dem a mek any money deh (according to burrell)

        Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

        Comment


        • #5
          McKenzie, in an interview with the Observer, in the meantime, called the stadium a "death trap" and said the significance of this week's 'Champs 100' celebration was the only reason it was being allowed to go ahead.
          So significance is more important that safety? A wha the........... Structures of that size should be inspected yearly, and is a pity nuh plan were in place for its replacement....while the KD Knight policital stadium stands unused.
          Winning means you're willing to go longer, work harder, and give more than anyone else - Vince Lombardi

          Comment


          • #6
            That only seats 5,000.

            Its a mini-stadium!

            Comment


            • #7
              OK, wha bout the Trelawny Stadium...
              Winning means you're willing to go longer, work harder, and give more than anyone else - Vince Lombardi

              Comment


              • #8
                Burrell acts as if the sky suddenly fell on his head, as the person responsible for everything dealing with football, a long term plan should've been implemented to avoid the inevitable.
                It is my understanding that the relation between the JFF and the National Stadium is solely a business one, hence the operators of the stadium may have to continue to play a role....
                I hope the decision to keep or not to an event... is not one that is made anyone other than the appropriate person.




                Blessed

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