• Our Impact
  • Whistleblower
  • Fact-Check Ghana
Donate
The Fourth Estate
  • Home
  • General News
  • Anti-Corruption
  • Environment
  • Human Rights
  • Our Impact
    • Honours
  • Opinions
FourthEstate FourthEstate
  • Our Impact
  • Whistleblower
  • Fact-Check Ghana
Search
  • Home
  • General News
  • Anti-Corruption
  • Environment
  • Human Rights
  • Our Impact
    • Honours
  • Opinions
© 2024 | The Fourth Estate
General NewsSpotlight

Weeds Overrun $145m Borteyman Sports Complex two years after African Games

By Clement Edward Kumsah Date: July 16, 2026
Screenshot 2026 07 16 112549
SHARE

Two years after Ghana spent US$145 million to build the Borteyman Sports Complex for the 13th African Games, weeds have overtaken parts of the multi-sport facility — in some places growing taller than the perimeter fence.  

A visit by The Fourth Estate to the sprawling complex on Sunday, July 5, 2026, paints a picture that contrasts with the fanfare that accompanied its commissioning ahead of the African Games in March 2024.

In its dormant period, many of the facilities remain locked, while nature takes over major sporting infrastructure, including a swimming pool complex, athletic tracks, children’s playground, tennis and volleyball courts.

- Advertisement -
DJI 20260705125949 0154 D
The walkway at the side entrance to the Aquatic Complex (swimming pool) and its walls are overgrown with weeds.
DJI 20260705134817 0202 D
DJI 20260705131757 0181 D
From the playground to the utility areas, weeds are taking over the Borteyman Sports Complex, including the generator and water storage zones.
weeds_take_over_borteyman_sports_complex

The Borteyman Sports Complex alone consumed US$145.1 million out of US$170 million that the Akufo-Addo administration borrowed from CAL Bank Ghana as part of the funds to finance the 13th African Games. It was constructed by Contracta Construction UK Limited.

The Complex has facilities including an aquatic centre, which houses a 1,000-seat swimming pool, an eight-lane warm-up pool, a 1,000-seat multi-purpose sports hall, and a 500-seat dome. It also has a five-court tennis complex with a collapsible 1,000-seat centre court, access roads, utility infrastructure, parking lots, an administration block, a children’s park, and Information and Communication Technology (ICT) infrastructure.

DJI 20260705131219 0171 D

However, during a visit to the complex, The Fourth Estate observed that the Aquatic Centre, Athletics Track, Tennis Centre, Multi-purpose Dome, and children’s playground were all surrounded by overgrown weeds. The weeds have also invaded the pedestrian walkways and open spaces, with some of the weeds growing taller than the facility’s perimeter wall.

DJI 20260705133853 0188 D
Dense weeds have overgrown the area between the Aquatic Complex and the tennis courts
DJI 20260705135005 0209 D
Tall weeds have overgrown the children’s playground at the Borteyman Sports Complex.

There was no sign of any sporting activity in the Complex in spite of the huge public investment that went into it,. The Akufo-Addo administration had planned to turn it into a sports university. 

- Advertisement -
DJI 20260705130013 0157 D
Behind the Aquatic Complex, weeds have grown into towering vegetation, rising almost to the height of nearby electric poles.
DJI 20260705125157 0147 D
The athletic tracks remain visible, but weeds are steadily reclaiming the spaces inside and outside the perimeter.

When the project was conceived, the government presented it as infrastructure that would not only host the African Games but also serve generations of Ghanaian athletes by expanding access to world-class sporting facilities.

Two years after the games ended, the Complex instead shows visible signs of neglect, with weeds showing dominance rather than sporting activities.

The maintenance of the facility is the responsibility of the National Sports Authority.

TAGGED:2023 All African GamesBorteyman Sports Complexcp_spotlightMinistry of youth and sports
Share This Article
Facebook Whatsapp Whatsapp LinkedIn Telegram Email
Leave a comment Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

- Advertisement -

LATEST STORIES

Audit stroy
System bypass: How GIFMIS is failing to address public financial irregularities
Komenda
The $35million Waste: Thieves strike Idle Komenda Sugar Factory [FULL VIDEO]
komenda featured image
Thieves steal equipment from idle Komenda Sugar Factory
Age cheat
Manufacturing ages for party positions? How NPP aspirants for Youth Organiser positions were disqualified
trafficked girls
Lured by opportunity, enslaved by debt: Ghana’s human trafficking crisis

You Might Also Like

Uncover the stories that related to the post

Special Prosecutor freezes assets of Sir John

Adutwum final 1
General News

Free Wi-Fi saga: Over 750 SHSs, offices without internet since March 2024  

dag
General News

LIGHTHOUSE CASE: Court strikes out chunk of church’s defence against Larry Odonkor

No ECG bill for Ada communities
General News

Landlords using electricity for free frustrated because of ECG’s failure to bill them

Journalism That Serves The People’s Interest

Sign up for The Fourth Estate’s newsletter and get our latest stories delivered straight to your inbox.

The Fourth Estate

The Fourth Estate is a non-profit, public interest and accountability investigative journalism project of the Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA). Our aim is to promote independent and critical research-based journalism that holds those in power answerable to the people they govern.

Latest Stories

Weeds Overrun $145m Borteyman Sports Complex two years after African Games
System bypass: How GIFMIS is failing to address public financial irregularities
The $35million Waste: Thieves strike Idle Komenda Sugar Factory [FULL VIDEO]
Thieves steal equipment from idle Komenda Sugar Factory

Quick Links

  • About The Fourth Estate
  • MFWA.org
  • Honours
  • Privacy & Terms of Use

© 2025 | The Fourth Estate – A Project of the Media Foundation of West Africa