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What the scope for the 100-day review tells us about the plan for 2032

By Matt Dennien

Brisbane 2032 chief executive Cindy Hook, shown with the Olympic rings and agitos, is one of many stakeholders eagerly waiting a final plan for the Games.

Brisbane 2032 chief executive Cindy Hook, shown with the Olympic rings and agitos, is one of many stakeholders eagerly waiting a final plan for the Games.

Now roughly a month since the Queensland LNP’s state election win, Premier David Crisafulli has put the final touches on a long-awaited independent body to drive 2032 Games infrastructure planning.

But its first task, to be carried out within 100 days, will be to review and report back on the work to date across venues, athletes villages and the transport to link them – with an eye to legacy benefits for residents.

We’ve annotated the key section of the review’s full terms of reference below to delve a little deeper than what is said in the document itself.

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Original URL: https://www.theage.com.au/link/follow-20170101-p5kup5