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London 2012 Olympic village ready for finishing touches
By Jim Boulden, CNN
January 30, 2012 -- Updated 1543 GMT (2343 HKT)
London's 2012 Olympic Village, which will house thousands of gold medal hopefuls, has been handed over to Games organizers six months to the day before opening ceremonies begin.
This picture, released by the Olympic Delivery Authority, offers a glimpse of what lies within the grounds of the purpose-built accomodation, which consists of 2,800 apartments.
In 2009, some 1,400 of the apartments were sold for $400 million to be rented by London's local government bodies. The Qatari government bought the remaining apartments in an $800 million deal which will also see it own and manage the village.
Britain's four-time Olympic rowing gold medalist Matthew Pinsent was on hand to help move some of the 16,000 beds into the complex.
In addition to the thousands of beds, 11,000 sofas and 5,000 toilet brushes will be brought in before the Games begin on July 27.
Pinsent, who claimed his medals in the coxless four and coxless pair rowing events, also helped to bed the plants which will decorate the complex's communal areas.
The Olympic Park is also nearly completed ahead of the four-yearly Games' opening ceremony.
Six months to go
Inside track
Qatari investment
Moving day
Bare necessities
Finishing touches
Countdown continues
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Olympic Village in London ready for next phase
- Games organizers will install facilities and services
- The Summer Games are scheduled to begin July 27
London (CNN) -- Six months to the day before Opening Ceremonies, builders have handed the Olympic Village over to the London 2012 organizers.
The first of 16,000 beds have been delivered as organizers start to fit out the rooms.
"We are starting the huge process to install essential facilities and services ready to welcome competitors from around the world in six months' time," Sebastian Coe, chairman of the London 2012 Organizing Committee said in a press release issued early Friday.
The beds will soon be joined by 11,000 sofas and even 5,000 toilet brushes, say organizers.
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The Summer Games run from July 27 through August 12.
Olympic Village, a huge housing complex of some 2,800 apartments within walking distance of the stadium in East London, has already been sold as part of the post-games legacy plans.
Nearly 1,400 of the apartments were sold in 2009 for $400 million and will be rented by local governments for subsidized housing. The remainder was sold to a consortium, including the Qatari government, as part of a $800 million deal to own and manage the entire village.
Local campaigners have pushed for more of the apartments to be social housing as part of the organizer's pledge to regenerate the area post-games.
The original plan was for the developer Lend Lease to raise the funding privately to build the village, but the work started in 2008 at the height of the financial crisis. The government decided instead to the foot the reported $1.6 billion bill and is unlikely to recoup the entire cost of the housing.
The complex will be known as East Village once it is turned over to renters and homeowners.
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