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  • 21 Aug, 2019

  • By, Wikipedia

Venues Of The 2010 Winter Olympics

For the 2010 Winter Olympics, a total of ten sports venues were used, seven in Vancouver (including BC Place), and three in Whistler. The majority of ice sport events were held in Vancouver, while Whistler, which normally serves as a ski resort, hosted the snow events. Six non-competition venues, three each in Vancouver and Whistler, provided athlete housing, space for media, and locations for ceremonies associated with the Games.

In its 2002 evaluation of Vancouver's bid during the bidding process for the 2010 Games, the Evaluation Commission of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) highlighted the number and quality of existing competition and training facilities as one of the bid's strengths. Of the competition venues that the bid proposed for use during the Games, six required new construction, with the remainder already built in Vancouver and Whistler. The Vancouver Organizing Committee for the Olympic Games (VANOC), which is responsible for the construction and maintenance of facilities for the Games, pledged that all new construction of permanent facilities, whether on public or private land, would be funded by the government.

According to CEO John Furlong, VANOC "started our venue construction as early as possible". Construction on Cypress Mountain, the first new competition venue to be completed, began in March 2006 and was completed only eight months later, three years ahead of the start of the Games. By December 2007, all three competition venues at Whistler were completed and open for training and testing. Final construction was completed in February 2009, and sporting events were scheduled at the venues to ensure that they would be adequately tested before hosting the Olympic events. In total, six new competition venues were constructed: Cypress Mountain, Richmond Olympic Oval, UBC Thunderbird Arena, Vancouver Olympic/Paralympic Centre, Whistler Olympic Park, and The Whistler Sliding Centre.

The Whistler Sliding Centre was promoted as being one of the fastest sliding tracks in the world, which caused a number of concerns about safety. On February 12, 2010, hours before the opening ceremony, Georgian luger Nodar Kumaritashvili suffered a fatal crash during a training run when he was thrown off his sled and collided with a steel pole. He was travelling 143.3 km/h (89.0 mph) at the time. His accident came after a series of incidents in the week and reignited concerns about the track's safety. Investigations were conducted the same day, concluding that the accident was not caused by deficiencies in the track. As a preventive measure, an extra 100 ft (30 m) of wall was added after the end of Turn 16, and the ice profile was changed.

Competition venues

Two snow-covered ski jumps, surrounded by evergreen trees.
Whistler Olympic Park ski jumps at Callaghan Valley
Front of a building bearing the words "Richmond Olympic Oval" and a picture of five interlocking rings.
The Richmond Olympic Oval

The largest competition venue was Canada Hockey Place, with a capacity of just under 19,000 spectators. For the first time, Olympic games were played on a narrower NHL-sized ice rink, measuring 61 by 26 metres (200 ft × 85 ft), instead of the international size of 61 m × 30 m (200 ft × 98 ft). This change saved an expected $10 million (CAD) in construction costs, and allowed more spectators to attend games. This arena, as well as the Pacific Coliseum (the second-largest venue used for the 2010 Olympics), was pre-existing and required minimal renovation in preparation for the Olympics. Of the newly constructed venues for the Games, the Whistler Sliding Centre was the largest, with space for 12,000 spectators to observe the luge, skeleton and bobsled events. Three venues used in the Games were outside Vancouver and Whistler: Cypress Mountain in West Vancouver, the Richmond Olympic Oval in Richmond, and UBC Doug Mitchell Thunderbird Sports Centre on the University Endowment Lands.

Venue Location Sports Capacity Ref.
General Motors Place Vancouver Ice hockey (final) 18,630
Cypress Mountain West Vancouver Freestyle skiing, snowboarding 8,000
Pacific Coliseum Vancouver Figure skating, short track speed skating 14,239
Richmond Olympic Oval Richmond Speed skating 8,000
UBC Doug Mitchell Thunderbird Sports Centre University Endowment Lands (UBC) Ice hockey 7,200
Vancouver Olympic/Paralympic Centre Vancouver Curling 6,000
Whistler Creekside Whistler Alpine skiing 7,600
Whistler Olympic Park Whistler Biathlon, cross-country skiing, Nordic combined, ski jumping 6,000
Whistler Sliding Centre Whistler Bobsleigh, luge, skeleton 12,000

Non-competition venues

At least a dozen cranes rise over buildings under construction. In the foreground, cars are driving by on existing streets, and a city skyline rises in the background.
The Olympic Village being constructed on the southeastern shore of False Creek near downtown Vancouver

Because of the significant distance between Vancouver and Whistler, Olympic Villages and media facilities were constructed in both locations. In addition, while medals ceremonies for the events held in Vancouver took place at the pre-existing BC Place, an additional venue was constructed in Whistler to award medals there. Because BC Place is an indoor stadium, the Olympic torch cauldron, which was lit in the middle of the stadium during the opening ceremony, could not be left there because of safety concerns. A permanent "external cauldron" was erected at Jack Poole Plaza on the Coal Harbour waterfront. It was fenced and unavailable to the public during the Olympics due to its proximity to the Main Media Centre.

Venue Location Purpose Ref.
BC Place Vancouver Opening and closing ceremonies
Main Media Centre Vancouver Media centre
Vancouver Olympic Village Vancouver Olympic Village
Whistler Media Centre Whistler Media centre
Whistler Olympic and Paralympic Village Whistler Olympic Village
Whistler Olympic Celebration Plaza Whistler Ceremonies and presentations

See also