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French Open to stay at Roland Garros
Published in Ahram Online on 13 - 02 - 2011

The French Tennis Federation voted to keep the French Open at its traditional Roland Garros venue and renovate the existing site by making it considerably larger, more attractive and modern, rather than moving it elsewhere.
Three other venues were bidding to host the clay-court Grand Slam tournament by 2016.
The proposed new sites at Versailles, close to the hugely popular Versailles palace, and in the suburbs at Gonesse and Marne-La-Vallee were much more expensive because they would have required building from scratch.
The FFT said on Sunday that it had chosen the option of renovating Roland Garros, located in western Paris for more than 80 years, by making it "60 percent" bigger while preserving its "unique history." "The Federation decided to stay on its original site at Porte d'Auteuil," the FFT said on Sunday. "It chose an ambitious, prestigious project resolutely looking to the future."
The new-look Roland Garros will feature 35 outside courts, a new press center and a center court with a retractable roof so that matches could go ahead when it's raining, and where night sessions could be played.
"Our ambition was to offer a project with a real future and of a very high quality," FFT president Jean Gachassin said on Sunday. "To improve the reception and the comfort of the players and spectators." Cost issues also appear to have played a crucial part in the decision making.
The FFT said that renovation costs at Roland Garros are expected to be €273 million ($370 million), compared to an estimated price tag of between €470 million and €800 million for the three other potential venues.
Gonesse was eliminated in the first round of voting and Versailles in the second. In the final round, Roland Garros received 70.13 percent of the votes to eliminate Marne-La-Vallee.
"I would like to congratulate all the participants ...most particularly (Paris) mayor Bertrand Delanoe," Gachassin said. "(Delanoe) has done an absolutely remarkable job to present a project in keeping with the international dimension of Roland Garros." Gonesse, whose bid was led by its mayor Jean-Pierre Blazy, received only 3.7 percent of votes in the first round.
Nevertheless, the FFT praised all the other losing bids for offering "the necessary guarantees for a good organization" of the French Open.
Roland Garros is the smallest of the four Grand Slam venues that also includes the Australian Open at Melbourne, the U.S. Open at Flushing Meadows in New York, and London's traditional grass-court event at Wimbledon.
Fans and players have regularly complained about the congestion at Roland Garros because of its narrow walkways and the stiflingly limited size of the complex.
Plans call for an extension of the current site from 21.3 acres (8.5 hectares) to about 33.8 acres (13.5 hectares).
Among the renovation options are a new adjacent stadium with a capacity of 8,000, and the use of other local infrastructure, such as the land at Stade Jean Bouin, where Stade Francais rugby club played its home games until the stadium was knocked down two years ago.
Local residents, wildlife enthusiasts and municipal authorities in Paris' leafy western hub have all previously voiced their anger at the plans to refurbish Roland Garros.


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