Roland Garros to Add Retractable Roof by 2018

May 28, 2013 | By New York Tennis Magazine Staff
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French Open officials have announced that they are planning to build a retractable roof over center court at Roland Garros which will allow for evening matches. The $440 million project, also include a new 4,850-seat show court and redesigned outer courts. The city of Paris and French Tennis Federation are appealing an April 1 decision by the Administrative Court of Paris, which blocked the plan and sided with local residents who complained it could harm a nearby botanical garden. A ruling on the appeal could be months away, but the city and federation recently reached a new agreement to proceed.

”Our project is still alive and moving on,” said French Open director Gilbert Ysern. ”We are in a gorgeous place that is part of Paris, and it bears a lot of history. All of this is 100 percent respected in our project, so we don’t see why and how in the end we could not be allowed to develop that.”

The federation plans to pay for all but $26 million of the costs, with the city covering the remainder, and building permits are to be filed in two months. Construction would begin in 2015, and the final phase would involve the installation of the roof in 2018. Roland Garros is the smallest of the four Grand Slam venues, and the renovation would add 13,000 square feet for the public. Much of the expansion would take place in the botanical garden, where a new court—the third-largest on the site—would open in 2017 and be surrounded by greenhouses on all four sides. Both Wimbledon and the Australian Open have retractable covers on their largest courts, while the French Open and U.S. Open do not. A roof at Roland Garros would provide protection from Paris’ frequent spring showers and allow the French Open to schedule night sessions, as the Australian Open and U.S. Open do.


New York Tennis Magazine Staff
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