The initial excitement of knowing Brazil would host both the 2014 World Cup and the 2016 Summer Olympics turned bittersweet, at best.
There were mass protests in 2013 against corruption and white elephant stadiums for the football. Then this year Brazil hit a perfect storm of political crisis, historic recession, runaway unemployment and a huge corruption scandal in the flagship national company Petrobras.
How did Rio de Janeiro and the country as a whole come out in the end?
"Hopefully the Games have also provided a bit of a lesson for Brazilian fans, although I doubt it," Kfouri added, referring to the loud booing at foreign athletes in everything from tennis to pole vaulting, and even during national anthems and medal ceremonies.
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- Bitter aftertaste -
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The glorious days of 2009 when the Olympics were awarded to Rio are a distant memory.
Back then, thousands of Cariocas -- as Rio natives are called -- celebrated on Copacabana beach, watching the decision live on a huge television screen.
He had started as an illiterate boy who shined shoes, became a metal worker and union leader, an opponent of the military dictatorship and finally president after three failed attempts. The Olympics were to be his crowning achievement.
But today it is pessimism that rules. Lula faces a corruption prosecution, his chosen successor Dilma Rousseff faces imminent removal from office in an impeachment trial, and her replacement, Michel Temer, is considered by many Brazilians to be illegitimate.
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In 2017, some 63 percent of Rio will be able to use public transport, against only 17 percent in 2009, thanks to the Olympic projects to extend the metro, build a light railway and set up a cross-city dedicated bus lane network.
"Transport is the biggest legacy of the Games in terms of the amount of investment and the amount of people benefiting," deputy mayor Rafael Picciani told AFP.
Residents aren't all happy, saying the buses are too few and too full, and that little has been done to address generalized problems in the poorest areas.
The cost of the Games is also controversial in a city with significant economic difficulties and a huge gap between rich and poor.
Although the authorities say that 60 percent of the bill was accounted for through private investors, Guilherme Dias, a school teacher in a poor neighborhood, says: "This party... was not done for the people. The events are far from where poor people live."
The city center, which had been badly run down, is one area where big improvements have been made. A modern tramway now runs from the domestic airport and a former dock area has been converted into a pedestrian zone with two new museums.
But many Cariocas, including the almost one in three living in favelas, fear little has changed.
Violent crime remains high, with shootings by criminals or by police a daily occurrence. On average, almost five people a day suffer violent death.