Eye on Expo 2030, Rome dreams of reinvigoration
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Eye on Expo 2030, Rome dreams of reinvigoration
Virginia Raggi, left rear, the former mayor of Rome who is now the president of the special commission for Rome’s Expo 2030 bid, at an awards ceremony for children in Rome, June 7, 2023. After years of decline, the city hopes to use a bid for Expo 2030 to re-envision itself as a place that works. (Massimo Berruti/The New York Times)

by Jason Horowitz



ROME.- Other visitors to the abandoned sports complex on the edge of Rome might just see muddy puddles, graffitied walls and loose cables blighting their view. Not Matteo Gatto.

Gatto, the technical director of Rome’s 10 billion-euro (about $10.9 billion) bid to host the Expo 2030 world’s fair, envisions a grand exposition hall. In the vast surrounding fields, he sees a winding boulevard spotted with international pavilions and solar-paneled umbrellas. All of it, in his conjuring, is connected to Rome by an extended train line that would bring 30 million people from the Colosseum.

“It will be beautiful,” he said.

But as Italy prepares to give its final pitch in Paris on Tuesday to the 179 international ambassadors who will vote in November on which city will host the Expo, there are two major obstacles standing in the way of Rome’s fantastic, and perhaps fantastical, future.

The first is the competition. Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni of Italy will be in France on Tuesday to make Italy’s case. But so will President Yoon Suk Yeol of South Korea, who is pushing for Busan, and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman of Saudi Arabia, who is backing Riyadh in a campaign that, as the Italians see it, has showered public investments on nations in exchange for support.

The second challenge, and perhaps the biggest obstacle to Rome’s grand plan, is one far closer to home: Rome itself.

Years of degradation, seemingly intractable garbage, transportation and infrastructure issues, and a cynical shrug by many Romans about the prospect of transformation or possibility of change are not exactly the stuff of campaign brochures. But officials say a rare confluence of international and national financing, private investment, and a mayor with a reputation for competence has put Rome at a crossroads between decline and resurgence.

The Expo, which helped Milan bloom into a cosmopolitan and international city in 2015, could, its Italian backers say, be decisive in Rome’s rise.

The city sorely needed “a unifying project to set the city, the capital of Italy, on the right track,” acknowledged Giampiero Massolo, an Italian ambassador leading Italy’s Expo campaign.

Back in the early 2000s, when Rome was led by ambitious and popular mayors, the city enjoyed a renaissance with big infrastructure and architecture projects, including the sports complex designed by Santiago Calatrava that Gatto would now like to repurpose.

The so-called Sail, for the soaring latticed roof that divided the sky into a blue grid, was intended to house a World Aquatics Championships. But it was abandoned in 2007 because of skyrocketing costs and accusations of wrongdoing.

It was a harbinger of a city headed downhill. The global financial crisis of 2008 exacerbated Rome’s problems. Hundreds of thousands of residents moved from the city center to cheaper houses in the peripheries. Extending public services to sparsely populated areas became unsustainable. Garbage collection and transportation agencies operating as ineffective patronage mills did not help.

Neither did what many Romans consider successive incompetent governments, including the previous, and much bemoaned, administration of Virginia Raggi, of the anti-establishment Five Star Movement. For many Romans, Raggi’s name became synonymous with the city’s degradation. Garbage-strewn streets attracted wildlife. Buses failed to show up or combusted. The grass in the parks swallowed children.

These days Raggi is president of the special commission for Rome’s Expo bid, and recently presided over an awards ceremony in the headquarters, where children presented posters under a slide reading “Expo 2030: The Eternal City Faces the Future.”

They imagined solar panel cars, buses that worked, fountains with taps to stop wasting water and a “city more adapted to cleanliness” — in short, all the things Raggi was blamed for not doing.

“You guys were great,” Raggi said, “An applause.”




Since she left office, a combination of factors has given the city its best chance in ages to turn things around. Billions of euros have poured into Rome from the European Union’s pandemic recovery fund, national financing for the 2025 Holy Year celebrations promises to spruce up the city and, Expo officials said, will be used to restore the Sail. A relatively affordable capital has drawn foreign real estate investors.

“The city has reached its lowest point and is relaunching, and all the numbers and data are clear on the growth,” said Rome’s mayor, Roberto Gualtieri, a former finance minister. “The expo would be the cherry on the cake. That would give a big boost. But honestly, our strategy does not only depend on Expo.”

The mayor said in an interview that Romans would soon see real changes. An embattled 600-million-euro waste-to-energy plant to solve the city’s horrific garbage problem was “fully on track” to start working in 2026. The maintenance on Rome’s subway lines would be done in about a year and a half, the first tram in about 20 years was in the works, and the repaving of about 500 miles of main streets constituted “the biggest work in the history of the city.”

“On the roads, the metro, the train and the waste, I know that in 2026 this will be fixed,” he said. “I can bet on that.”

He talked about new museums, high-tech industries, and an injection of youth and new infrastructure not seen since the early 2000s.

But despite the mayor’s optimism, the city is still in maddeningly shabby shape and needs all the help it can get.

Last month, Italy pulled out all the stops when the international Expo representatives came to Rome. Delegates took in an evening music performance in front of the Colosseum that included a ballet dancer hanging from a balloon in the shape of the moon and a light show on the arena’s walls. Five hundred drones moved in synchronized choreography, flying overhead to create an inclusive spin on Rome’s 2,500-year history.

But Italians, as history has also shown, know when politics required a dagger. In an Expo election with no shortage of geopolitics and financial wheeling and dealing, the Italians have suggested that the Saudi bid was more about making Riyadh a global metropolis than fostering a global regeneration.

Massolo pointed out that the financial might of Gulf States, like Qatar in its successful bid to host the World Cup, has resulted in some remorse, if more for the bought than the buyer. Still, Saudi Arabia, legitimate in its use of financial leverage, he said, had proved a tough competitor because of “the power, of course, of money, the power of investments.”

France, for example, threw its support to Riyadh during the energy crisis, when President Emmanuel Macron sought alternatives to Russian gas. During the visit of Crown Prince Mohammed, the Expo has been a main agenda item.

“Of course we would be happier to have the support of France,” Massolo said. “But evidently, as you know, Macron has his interests in making other decisions.”

Unlike “the huge public budget investments of the Saudis and the huge private megacompanies of Korea investments,” Massolo said, Italy had a different pitch.

It sought to show voters “what is achievable if we work together,” he said. But even that cuddly-sounding theme had an edge, as Italian boosters of the Expo have depicted the Saudi bid as a human rights disaster waiting to happen.

At a recent gay pride event at the Baths of Caracalla, Gualtieri warned that a Saudi victory boded for a “grim, oppressive and dark” Expo.

When the Expo delegates toured a Rome food market by the Circus Maximus, accepting strawberries and cheese from vendors, they also heard from gay rights activists invited by the city to highlight Rome’s contrast with Riyadh.

“If you think about our competitors,” Gatto said in the more modern ruin of the sports complex, where a dark reflective pool of dirty rainwater took the place of an Olympic-sized swimming pool, “it’s a clash of civilizations.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










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