Athlete's village delivery will be on time, and on budget, say Paris 2024 organisers

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The construction of the Olympic athletes village is on time and on budget as organisers promise to deliver a safe Games, the general director of Paris 2024 said on Friday.

"Most of my colleagues in the past were stressed about the delivery of the infrastructures. I must say I'm not on that side with Paris 2024. I'm very cool and serene, we will deliver on time and on budget," Etienne Thobois said from the top of one of the buildings.

"We will take over the village one year from now. The construction will be finished in January and the village will be fully delivered in March."

"We discussed with the local authorities to build a new neighbourhood for the future in this area and then to adapt to make an Olympic village," Thobois explained.

"The idea was to build a neighbourhood that would be used as an Olympic village, not the other way around. It guarantees that we will live up to expectations."

Some 6,000 will live in the neighbourhood, which spans over the suburban cities of Saint Ouen, Saint Denis and L'Ile Saint Denis.

"The various buildings here are will have a final use that will be different, some will be social housing, some will be private housing, some will be offices, so will be public services," Thobois said.

"And during the Games the use of the building might be different, because we will need as many beds as possible. So, that will mean overlay, that will mean a transformation. It's a bit of extra work but that's again the guarantee that the legacy will be best addressed."

"Since 2017, our budget has remained the same in constant euros," Nicolas Ferrand, director general of SOLIDEO, the public body responsible for delivering the Olympic and Paralympic infrastructures, told reporters.

There will be no air conditioning in the athletes' rooms at Paris 2024, but a cooling system will be used instead.

Security, however, has been a hot topic following the 2022 Champions League final debacle and amid tensions over the reform of the pension system.

"Safety has also been an issue in previous Games and it's been at the heart of our thinking from the start," Thobois said.

"I understand we have a pretty lively democracy in France and it is definitely things we take into consideration," he added with a smile.

"There will be a police station within the village, and the ministry of interior launched a programme around pet crime. There will also be extra security in public transports."

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