Beds in athletes' village at Tokyo Olympics will be made of cardboard

Tokyo Olympic athletes beware - particularly larger ones.
A journalist films a cardboard bed in the Tokyo 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Villages. Picture: Jae C Hong/APA journalist films a cardboard bed in the Tokyo 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Villages. Picture: Jae C Hong/AP
A journalist films a cardboard bed in the Tokyo 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Villages. Picture: Jae C Hong/AP

The bed frames in the athletes' village at this year's Olympics will be made of cardboard. Sturdy cardboard.

"Those beds can stand up to 200 kilogrammes," explained Takashi Kitajima, the general manager of the athletes' village, speaking through an interpreter.

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That's about 440 pounds, and surely no Olympic athlete weighs that much.

"They are stronger than wooden beds," Kitajima added.

He also took into account the possibility of a wild room celebration after, say, a gold-medal victory.

"Of course, wood and cardboard would each break if you jumped on them," he said.

The single bed frames will be recycled into paper products after the games. The mattress components - the mattresses are not made of cardboard - will be recycled into plastic products.

The mattress is broken up into three distinct sections, and the firmness of each can be adjusted.

The idea was to use materials that could be remade after the Olympics and Paralympics. But the cardboard frames and supports should give the rooms a spartan look.

Organisers showed off the beds and a few other furnishings on Thursday at their headquarters. The entire athletes' village complex will be completed in June. The Olympics open on 24 July followed by the Paralympics on 25 August.

"The organising committee was thinking about recyclable items, and the bed was one of the ideas," Kitajima explained, crediting local Olympic sponsor Airweave Inc. for the execution.

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Organisers say this is the first time that the beds and bedding in the athletes' village have been made of renewable materials.

The athletes' village being built alongside Tokyo Bay will comprise 18,000 beds for the Olympics and be composed of 21 apartment towers. Even more building construction is being planned in the next several years.

Real estate ads say the units will be sold off afterwards, or rented, with sale prices starting from about 54 million yen - or about £382,000 - and soaring to three or four times that much.

Some fear the apartments will flood the market, possibly impacting property values.

The units will be sold off by various real estate companies. Ads suggest many of the units will be slightly larger than a typical apartment in Tokyo, which is about 650-750 square feet.

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