WHY BRISTOL? BENEFITS AND COSTINGS Bristol has a history and tradition that make it one of the most creative, frontier-breaking, cutting- edge, multi-cultural and fun cities in the world. It's because Bristol is a place where you can come and play, whether you want to play football, or whether you want to play out on the town at night, or whether you want to play at inventing new music, art and drama. It's a playful city, so we want the world to come and play in our city before, during and long after the 2018 World Cup. That's why. So, what have we got to do to make sure Bristol is one of the cities on the England Candidate Host City list in December? We've got to give the England Bid Team and ultimately FIFA confidence that the World Cup won't just be safe in Bristol's hands, but it will become even bigger, more exciting and successful in this creative, fun-loving dynamic city of ours. We don't just want to meet FIFA's expectations for the World Cup, we want to exceed them here in Bristol! We've got to give them a stadium that meets all their detailed requirements. We've got to be able to move thousands of people around the city easily and efficiently. We'Ve got to have hotel rooms and beds for everyone visiting the city. We've got to provide the highest-spec team base camps, hotels and training sites. We've got to find the sites where we can put on the biggest and best 'Fan Fests' the World Cup has ever seen. We've got to be able to put on the biggest welcome Bristol has ever put on! It will cost a lot of money to get the city ready to welcome the world in 2018. But it is the biggest event in the world after all, and it will probably bring many times what it costs back into the city. For example, it's reckoned that each time the FA Cup Final was played in Cardiff while Wembley was being rebuilt, it was the same as £2001 being spent in the city's economy. If Bristol gets to host five games in 2018 - and it could - that would be worth £ioom in today's money. And with maybe as much as seven or eight years as an official FIFA World Cup Host City, there'd be advertising, promotional and publicity opportunities worth many more times this amount for Bristol. Being an official World Cup Host City would also pave the way for investment in new infrastructure across and beyond the city. Not just the much- needed, state-of-the-art transport infrastructure, but high-speed telecommunications infrastructure, and new environmental infrastructure to tackle the effects of climate change. And then there's the legacy. This has to be an opportunity to bring new benefits and opportunities that will last in Bristol for many years to come. Only by winning the right to be a World Cup Host City in the first place can we begin to build the legacy for the future. It's a big prize. Bristol needs your help to win it. Bristol's twin town Hannover hit the jackpot in the 2006 World Cup, hosting a quarter final between Spain and France, proving our city could see the top international teams in the world heading out west.

AJAX ARCHIEF

Programmaboekjes (vanaf 1934) | 2009 | | pagina 17