Reinventing Rio
The dazzling but tarnished Brazilian city gets a makeover as it prepares for the 2014 World Cup and 2016 Olympic Games
- By Alan Riding
- Photographs by Eduardo Rubiano Moncada
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2010, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 6)
So, for all their devotion to “the marvelous city,” as they call Rio, Cariocas know full well that their hometown has been in decline. The slide began 50 years ago when Brazil’s capital moved to Brasília. For two centuries before then, Rio was the capital of finance and culture as well as politics. To the rest of the world, Rio was Brazil. But once politicians, civil servants and foreign diplomats moved to the new capital in 1960, São Paulo increasingly dominated the nation’s economy. Even important oil fields off the coast of Rio brought little solace. The state government received a share of royalties, but no oil boom touched the city. Rio was stripped of its political identity but found no substitute. Many Brazilians no longer took it seriously: they went there to party, not to work.
“I’d call Rio a ship adrift,” says Nélida Piñón, a Brazilian novelist. “We lost the capital and got nothing in return. Rio’s narcissism was once a sign of its self-sufficiency. Now it’s a sign of its insecurity.”
Lately, Rio has even fallen behind the rest of Brazil. For the first time in its history, Brazil has enjoyed 16 years of good government, first under President Fernando Henrique Cardoso and now under President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, who is to leave office on January 1, 2011. And the result has been political stability, economic growth and new international prestige. But during much of this time, Rio—both the city and the state that carries its name—has been plagued by political infighting, incompetence and corruption. And it has paid the price in poor public services and mounting crime.
Yet, for all that, when I recently returned to Rio, I found many Cariocas full of optimism. The city looked much as it did a decade ago, but the future looked different. And with good reason. Last October, Rio was chosen to host the 2016 Summer Olympics, the first to be held in South America and, after Mexico City in 1968, only the second in Latin America. As if in one fell swoop, Cariocas recovered their self-esteem. Further, Lula’s strong support for Rio’s Olympic bid represented a vote of confidence from Brazil as a whole. And this commitment looks secure with either of the main candidates to succeed Lula in general elections on October 3—Dilma Rousseff, Lula’s hand-picked nominee, and José Serra, the opposition challenger. Now, with federal and state governments pledging $11.6 billion in extra aid to prepare the city for the Olympics, Rio has a unique chance to repair itself.
“Barcelona is my inspiring muse,” Eduardo Paes, the city’s energetic young mayor, told me in his downtown office, referring to how the Catalan capital used the 1992 Summer Olympics to modernize its urban structures. “For us, the Olympics are not a panacea, but they will be a turning point, a beginning of the transformation.” And he listed some upcoming events that will measure the city’s progress: the Earth Summit in 2012, known as Rio+20, two decades after the city hosted the first Earth Summit; the soccer World Cup in 2014, which will take place across Brazil, with the final to be held in Rio’s Maracanã stadium; and the city’s 450th anniversary in 2015.
For the Olympics, at least, Rio need not start from scratch. Around 60 percent of the required sports installations were built for the 2007 Pan American Games, including the João Havelange Stadium for athletics; a swimming arena; and facilities for gymnastics, cycling, shooting and equestrian events. The Lagoa Rodrigo de Freitas will again be used for the rowing competitions and Copacabana for beach volleyball, while the marathon will have numerous scenic routes to choose from. The Rio Olympics Organizing Committee will have a budget of $2.8 billion to ensure every site is in good shape.
But because many competition venues will be a dozen or more miles from the new Olympic Village in Barra da Tijuca, transportation could become an Olympic-size headache. Barra today is linked to the city only by highways, one of which goes through a tunnel, the other over the Tijuca Mountains. While about half the athletes will compete in Barra itself, the rest must be transported to three other Olympic “zones,” including the João Havelange Stadium. And the public has to get to Barra and the other key areas.
To pave the way, the organizing committee is counting on a $5 billion state and municipal investment in new highways, improvements to the railroad system and an extension of the subway. The federal government has also committed to modernize the airport by 2014, a long overdue upgrade.
Single Page « Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 Next »
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.
Related topics: Crime Poverty Renovation and Restoration Brazil
Additional Sources
“Gangland; Who Controls the Streets of Rio de Janeiro?” John Lee Anderson, The New Yorker, Oct. 5, 2009









Comments (7)
"The beaches are also strikingly heterogeneous: people of all income levels and colors mix comfortably"
It is good that there are no armed clashes between races over beach blanket space, but it would be extremely unusual to have a major public beach with zero crime and for that crime to have no demographic characteristics. As for as the teeming shantytowns, the best measure of progress would be a decline in their populations, as well as in Rio generally.
Posted by Thomas Michael Andres on January 9,2012 | 11:49 PM
My 23 year old daughter has lived in Copacabana since July of this year. Initially apprehensive, she has adapted to her surroundings and remains aware of what occurs around her. I read this article with great interest, and have found that much of what has been written here supports her tales of 'life in Rio'...not exactly what she expected, but interesting and lively all the same.
Posted by Cindy on October 20,2010 | 11:17 PM
Never having been to Rio, I found this article fascinating. To see an entire city, for the most part, see the good in their environment and want to, as a group, improve upon what has already been done is so positive. I wish my city would be able to unite with that type of vision in mind.
Posted by Barbara Mongan on October 4,2010 | 09:38 PM
Current event
Posted by Mrs. Pullen on October 1,2010 | 04:10 PM
It's interesting that Río has the opportunity to be shown as a modern and pacific city; However, until I read this article, I had no idea Rio was seen as an abandoned and dangerous city. As an average person, I have (had) the idea that Río is a fun place to live in, great known for it's beaches and festivals.
Posted by Luis on September 15,2010 | 09:27 PM
I live in Rio, and I have lived in many other places in the world, including Metropolitan Detroit, Michigan.
From my perspective, generally speaking, I don't see a whole lot of differences between Rio's problems and those of the City of Detroit (and other cities in the world), the only exceptions being that Rio is full of life and beauty and many friendly people and Detroit is not.
Posted by Susan on August 28,2010 | 06:20 AM
Terrible!
Posted by Alex on August 23,2010 | 03:23 PM