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Facts and General Information...

2010 Winter Olympics Official website

It is likely to contain information of a speculative nature and the content
may change as the event approaches and more information becomes
available.
XXI Olympic Winter Games


The 2010 Winter Olympics logo was unveiled on
April 23, 2005 and is named Ilanaaq the Inunnguaq.
Ilanaaq is the Inuktitut word for friend

Host city Vancouver, BC, Canada
Nations participating 80+ (projected)
Athletes participating 5,500 (projected)
Events 86 in 7 sports
Opening ceremony February 12
Closing ceremony February 28
Stadium BC Place Stadium

related news:
Vancouver 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter GamesThe 2010 Winter
Olympics, officially known as the XXI Olympic Winter Games or the 21st
Winter Olympics, will be held in 2010 in Vancouver, British Columbia,
Canada. Both the Olympic and Paralympic Games are being organized by
the Vancouver Organizing Committee (VANOC).

The 2010 Winter Olympics will be the third Olympics hosted by Canada, and
the first by the province of British Columbia. Previously, Canada was home
to the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal and the 1988 Winter Olympics in
Calgary. These will also be the first games to be held in an NHL market
since the league allowed its players to participate starting in 1998.

Following Olympic tradition, current Vancouver mayor Sam Sullivan
received the Olympic flag during the closing ceremony of the 2006 Winter
Olympics in Turin, Italy, which was also attended by Governor General
Michaëlle Jean and Premier of British Columbia, the host province, Gordon
Campbell, himself a Vancouver native. The flag was raised on February 28,
2006, in a special flag raising ceremony, and will be on display at
Vancouver's city hall until the Olympic opening ceremony. At the same
time, Prime Minister Stephen Harper said in a statement that the Olympic
flame had begun its journey to Vancouver.

The Call for Volunteers program was launched on February 12, 2008 to find
25,000 volunteers.

Bidding
2010 Winter Olympics bids
The Canadian Olympic Association chose Vancouver as the Canadian
candidate city over Calgary, which sought to re-host the games and Quebec
City, which had lost the 2002 Olympic bid in 1995. On the first round of
voting on November 21, 1998, Vancouver-Whistler had 26 votes, Quebec
City with 25 and Calgary 21. On December 3, 1998, the second and final
round of voting occurred between the two leading contenders, which saw
Vancouver win with 40 votes compared to Quebec City's 32. The win
allowed Vancouver to prepare its bid and begin lobbying efforts
internationally.

After the bid bribing scandal that took place with the 2002 Winter Olympics
at Salt Lake City (which saw Quebec City asking for compensation (CDN$8
million) for their failed 2002 bid), 1999 saw many of the rules around the
bidding process change. The IOC created the Evaluation Commission which
was appointed on October 24, 2002. Prior to the bidding for the 2008
Summer Olympics, often host cities would fly members of the IOC to their
city where they toured the city and were provided with gifts from the city.
The lack of oversight and transparency often led to allegations of money for
votes. Afterward, changes brought forth by the IOC bidding rules were
tightened, and more focused on technical aspects of candidate cities. The
team analysed the candidate city features and provided its input back to the
IOC. The bid books from the three candidate cities were submitted in
January 2003 and inspections occurred before May 2003, when the final
report was submitted.

Vancouver's residents were asked in a referendum whether they accepted
the responsibilities of the host city should it win its bid. Sixty-four percent
of residents accepted the proposal. The referendum was held only in
Vancouver, though the infrastructure tab was to be picked up by the
province as a whole.

Furthermore, this victory was helped by a media campaign which saw
those who supported the Olympic bid outspend those who were against the
bid by 88:1.[citation needed] Regardless, it was the first time such a
referendum was successful. In neighbouring Washington state to the south,
both the state legislature and Governor Gary Locke passed a resolution in
support of Vancouver's bid, and sent it to the IOC.

Vancouver won the bidding process to host the Olympics by a vote of the
International Olympic Committee on July 2, 2003 at the 115th IOC Session
held in Prague, Czech Republic. The result was announced by IOC
President Jacques Rogge.

Vancouver faced two other finalists shortlisted that same February:
PyeongChang, South Korea and Salzburg, Austria. Pyeongchang had the
most votes of the three cities in the first round of voting, in which Salzburg
was eliminated. In the run-off, all but two of the members who had voted for
Salzburg voted for Vancouver.

Two years earlier, Canada had put in a bid for the 2008 Summer Olympics in
Toronto, but lost out to Beijing. British Columbia had refused to support
Toronto's bid that,[5] had it succeeded, would have ended Vancouver's
chances of hosting the 2010 games as the IOC preferred to rotate the
Games among continents.

2010 Winter Olympics bidding results
City NOC Name Round 1 Round 2
Vancouver, British Columbia  Canada 40 56
PyeongChang  South Korea 51 53
Salzburg  Austria 16 -


Construction
2010 Winter Olympics
Bid process
Village
Mascots

IOC · COC · VANOC

The Olympic Flag outside the Vancouver City Hall. This particular flag was
replaced with a replica after it was stolen.The initial problem Vancouver
faced in winning the bid for the 2010 Winter Olympics was fundraising for
construction of venues. The Bid Committee, and subsequently VANOC,
arranged for commitments of investment on a 50/50 basis by the federal
and provincial governments, primarily for amounts to cover venue
construction costs. It later began to achieve sponsorships and donations
from private corporations and institutions. Such commitments were made
enthusiastically as a chance to build on the world prestige Vancouver
already gained as host of the 1986 World's Fair and to improve on the
technological advances made during that event, like the expansion of the
SkyTrain transit system.

The expansion was a pledge of the BC government, and not the
responsibility of VANOC. Construction of the rapid transit link between
Richmond, the adjacent international airport and downtown Vancouver is
now underway and is expected to be completed by late 2009. The BC
government also indicated it would pay for a C$600 million upgrade of the
Sea-to-Sky Highway to accommodate increased traffic between Vancouver
and Whistler, although this highway upgrade has been overdue for more
than a decade and will still not meet the basic needs of the corridor.

The three main venues -- constructed at a cost of $580 million, about 23
percent above the 2003 bid forecasts -- have already had their work largely
completed. The $40-million Hillcrest/Nat Bailey stadium park, which will
host curling, will be finished later this year. The Vancouver Olympic
Committee (VANOC) spent $16.6 million on upgrading facilities at Cypress,
which will host the freestyle (aerials, moguls, ski cross) and snowboarding
events. The athletes' villages in Whistler and Vancouver are still under
construction, as are the main media centre in Coal Harbour and its Whistler
counterpart.

As of 2004, the operational cost of the 2010 Winter Olympics is estimated to
be in the range of C$1.4 billion. In 2006, VANOC CEO John Furlong
estimated it would be about C$1.7 billion, all raised from non-government
sources, primarily through sponsorships and the auction of national
broadcasting rights. C$580 million is the taxpayer-supported budget to
construct or renovate venues throughout Vancouver and Whistler, C$200
million is expected to be spent for security, of which the Royal Canadian
Mounted Police (RCMP) is the lead agency.


Logo and mascots
2010 Winter Olympics mascots
related news:
Mascots announced for 2010 Games
Newspaper campaigns to elevate Vancouver Olympic character from
sidekick status.  The 2010 Winter Olympics logo was unveiled on April 23,
2005 and is named Ilanaaq the Inunnguaq. Ilanaaq is the Inuktitut word for
friend. The logo is based on the Inukshuk built for the Northwest Territories
Pavilion at Expo 86 and donated to the city of Vancouver after the event. It
is now used as a landmark on English Bay beach.

The mascots for the 2010 Winter Olympic and Paralympic Games were
introduced on November 27, 2007. After the unveiling, many people were
displeased with the look of the new mascots because they represented a
small population of Vancouver.  Inspired by traditional First Nations
creatures, the mascots include:

Miga - A mythical sea bear, part orca and part kermode bear.
Quatchi - A sasquatch.
Sumi - An animal guardian spirit who wears the hat of the orca whale, flies
with the wings of the mighty Thunderbird and runs on the strong furry legs
of the black bear.
Mukmuk - A Vancouver Island marmot, Mukmuk is not an official mascot but
acts as their sidekick.
Miga and Quatchi are mascots for the Olympic Games, while Sumi is the
mascot for the Paralympic Games.


Sports
Eighty-six winter sports events have been announced as part of the 2010
Winter Olympics. The eight sports categorized as ice sports are: bobsled,
luge, skeleton, ice hockey, figure skating, speed skating, short track speed
skating, and curling. The three sports categorized as alpine, skiing and
snowboarding events are: alpine, freestyle and snowboarding. The four
sports categorized as Nordic events are: biathlon, cross country skiing, ski
jumping, and nordic combined.

Alpine skiing
Biathlon
Bobsleigh
Cross-country skiing
Curling
Figure skating
Freestyle skiing
Ice hockey
Luge
Nordic combined
Short track speed skating
Skeleton
Ski jumping
Snowboarding
Speed skating


The opening and closing ceremonies and the events categorized as ice
sports (excluding bobsleigh, luge and skeleton) will be held in Vancouver
and Richmond. The sports categorized as "Nordic events" will be held in
the Callaghan Valley located just to the west of Whistler. All alpine skiing
events will be held on Whistler Mountain (Creekside) and sliding events
(bobsleigh, luge and skeleton) will be held on Blackcomb Mountain.
Cypress Mountain (located in Cypress Provincial Park in West Vancouver)
will host the 2010 freestyle skiing (aerials, moguls, and ski cross), and all
2010 snowboard events (half-pipe, parallel giant slalom, snowboard cross).

Vancouver 2010 will also be the first winter Olympics in which both men's
and women's hockey will be played on a narrower, NHL-sized ice rink,
measuring 200 ft × 85 ft (61 m × 26 m), instead of the international size of
200 ft × 98.5 ft (61 m × 30 m). The games will be played at General Motors
Place, home of the NHL's Vancouver Canucks. This change is expected to
save $10 million (CAD) in construction costs and allow an additional 35,000
spectators to attend Olympic hockey games.


Additional events
There were a number of events proposed to be included in the 2010 Winter
Olympics. On November 28, 2006, the IOC Executive Board at their meeting
in Kuwait voted to include skicross in the official program. The Vancouver
Olympic Committee (VANOC) subsequently approved the event to be
officially part of the Games program.

Events up for inclusion but were ultimately rejected included:

Biathlon mixed relay
Mixed doubles curling
Team alpine skiing
Team bobsled and skeleton
Team luge
Women's ski jumping

Controversies
The IOC voted in 2006 not to include women's ski jumping in the 2010
Games, on the grounds that the sport was not yet developed enough and
did not meet basic criteria for inclusion. The members of the Canadian
Women Ski Jumping Team filed a grievance with the Canadian Human
Rights Board citing gender discrimination. So far the IOC has yet to
comment or change its decision.

According to lobby group Women's Ski Jumping USA, a group composed of
"some of the top women ski jumpers", will file a Statement of Claim with
the Supreme Court of British Columbia suing the Vancouver Olympic
Organizing Committee for excluding women ski jumpers from the
Vancouver games.

The athlete's village located at South East False Creek was originally
planned to be a model sustainable community, with state of the art energy
efficiency provisions, and a mix of market and social housing, at one third
market, one third social housing and one third subsidized middle income
housing. The City of Vancouver would break even through the sale of
market housing. However, a new city council in 2005 dropped the
provisions for subsidized middle income housing and then sold the lands to
a private developer for 193 million dollars, thereby erasing earlier plans for
a sustainable and socially just community.

On August 22, 2008 The Globe and Mail reported that the Harper
government intended to tie funding to the opening ceremonies to control
over content. This was widely criticized as reflecting policies of interfering
with the arts and exercising ideological control. However, the vice-
president of communications for the Vancouver Olympic Organizing
Committee, Renée Smith-Valade, said the government was not bringing
politics into the 2010 games and will not have veto power over any part of
the Olympic ceremonies.


Venues
For the first time, the Winter Olympics will be held by the sea and some
venues, including the Richmond Olympic Oval, are at sea level. The 2010
Games will also be the first—Winter or Summer—to have an Opening
Ceremony held indoors.

Vancouver, which will be the most populous city ever to hold the Winter
Games, will also be the warmest: in February, when the Games will be
held, Vancouver has an average temperature of 4.8 °C (40.6 °F).


Greater Vancouver
Vancouver

BC Place Stadium - Opening and Closing Ceremonies, nightly medal
presentations
Vancouver Olympic Village

A forest of cranes tower over the Olympic village being constructed on the
southeastern shore of False Creek near downtown Vancouver. Vancouver
Convention & Exhibition Centre - Media centre
Canada Hockey Place - Ice hockey (primary venue)
Pacific Coliseum - Figure skating, short track
Hillcrest Park - Curling
University of British Columbia

UBC Winter Sports Centre Ice hockey (secondary venue)
Richmond

Richmond Olympic Oval - Speed Skating
West Vancouver

Cypress Mountain Resort - Freestyle skiing, snowboard

[edit] Whistler
Whistler Olympic and Paralympic Village
Whistler Creekside - Alpine skiing
Whistler Olympic Park in Callaghan Valley - Biathlon, cross country skiing,
Nordic combined, ski jumping (fomerly the Whistler Nordic Venue)
Whistler Sliding Centre - bobsleigh, luge, skeleton
Due to the fact that corporate sponsorship is not allowed for an Olympic
venue, GM Place will be renamed Canada Hockey Place for the duration of
the games.


Broadcasting
Vancouver 2010 will be broadcast worldwide by a number of television
broadcasters. As rights for the 2010 games have been packaged with those
for the 2012 Summer Olympics, broadcasters will be largely identical for
both events. Confirmed broadcasters include:

Australia
Nine Network and FOXTEL
Brazil
TV Record, a privately owned, free-to-air channel in Brazil, will offer
increased coverage of the Olympic Games across a number of TV
channels. The organisation will also acquire the rights to air the Games
across all media platforms, including TV, cable, satellite, internet and
mobile telephones.
Canada
A consortium led by CTVglobemedia and Rogers Media, expected to
include CTV, TSN, RDS, RIS, Rogers Sportsnet, OMNI Television, OLN, CTV
Newsnet, Rogers radio stations, potentially other outlets in the CTV and
Rogers families, and third-party broadcasters TQS, APTN and ATN
United Kingdom
BBC
Hong Kong
Cable TV
Japan
NHK
Mexico
Televisa and TV Azteca
New Zealand
Sky TV and Prime
Philippines
Solar Sports
South Korea
SBS
United States
NBC Universal

Torch Relay

The clock counting down to the opening of the Olympics in downtown
Vancouver.  The Olympic Torch Relay is the transfer of the Olympic flame
from Ancient Olympia, Greece - where the first Olympic Games were held
thousands of years ago - to the stadium of the city hosting the current
Olympic Games. The flame arrives just in time for the Opening Ceremony.

For the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Winter Games, the flame will first be lit in
Olympia in late 2009. It will then travel from Greece, over the North Pole to
Canada's high Arctic and on to the West Coast and Vancouver. The Olympic
Torch will be carried by thousands of Canadians of all ages and cultural
backgrounds: on foot, dog sled, snowmobile, horse, plane and virtually
every means of transport known to the people of Canada. The torch relay is
said to be the longest in winter Olympic history and will travel across all of
Canada on its journey to Vancouver.

For the first time in Olympic history the Olympic flame will be lit indoors, as
BC Place is a covered stadium. This has caused some speculation on how
this will be accomplished, as such a large flame burning for the required 15
days would cause environmental issues inside the stadium. A possible
solution to the problem includes installing a special ventilation system to
house the flame. It has yet to be officially stated how this problem will be
solved.


Opposition

Members of the Native Warriors Society pose with the stolen Winter
Olympics flag. They stole the flag to protest the Olympics, and to honour
the death of Harriet Nahanee. Opposition to the 2010 Olympic Games in
Vancouver has been expressed by hundreds of activists and politicians,
including Lower Mainland Mayors Derek Corrigan and Richard Walton. Many
of the public Olympic events held to date in Vancouver have been attended
by protesters. Non-violent environmental protests at Eagleridge Bluffs in
West Vancouver resulted in the arrest of over 20 people and jail time for
two local women, Betty Krawczyk and Harriet Nahanee. Protesters have
also vandalized branches of the Royal Bank of Canada, an Olympic sponsor,
in Ottawa, Vancouver and Victoria.

There are several reasons for the opposition, some of which are reflected in
the documentary film Five Ring Circus. These issues include:

Large expense to taxpayers (estimated at CAN$580 million)
Destruction of the natural environment (such as Eagleridge Bluffs)
Loss of affordable housing . The Anti-Poverty Committee has promised that
they would target VANOC officials in their homes and businesses, and on
22 May 2007, "evicted" the British Columbia Cabinet and VANOC officials by
trashing their offices in downtown Vancouver. "
Rising homelessness caused by speculation on land in the Downtown
Eastside and divergence of funds from social services to Olympic costs.  
Use, by the provincial government, of the Olympics to force through a 2
billion dollar private public partnership funded rapid transit link from
Downtown Vancouver to the Vancouver International Airport, over other
transit options
On another front, local First Nations people as well as Canadian Inuit
expressed concern over the choice of an inukshuk as the symbol of the
Games, with some Inuit leaders such as Nunavut Commissioner Peter Irniq
stating that the inukshuk is a culturally important symbol to them. He said
that the "Inuit never build inuksuit with head, legs and arms. I have seen
inuksuit build more recently, 100 years maybe by non-Inuit in Nunavut, with
head, legs and arms. These are not called inuksuit. These are called
inunguat, imitation of man." Local First Peoples also expressed annoyance
that the design did not reflect West Coast native culture such as that of the
Squamish or Haida, but rather that of the Inuit, who are indigenous to the
Arctic far from Vancouver. One chief also said that the design lacked
dignity, comparing it to Pac-Man. However, other First Nations and Inuit
leaders praised the design. The First Nations governments of the
Squamish, Musqueam, Lil'wat and Tsleil-Waututh (the "Four Host Nations"),
on whose traditional territory the games will be held, signed a protocol in
2004 in support of the games.
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FUTURE OLYMPICS SITES AND CITIES
LONDON 2012 OLYMPICS HOTEL ROOMS
VANCOUVER 2010 OLYMPICS HOTEL ROOMS
VANCOUVER 2010
XXI Olympic Winter Games
From the 12th to 28th February 2010

ELECTION

The city of Vancouver was elected Host City of the XXI Olympic
Winter Games in 2010 at the 115th IOC Session in Prague on 2
July 2003. Eight cities applied to host the Games: Andorra la Vella
in Andorra, Bern in Switzerland, Harbin in China, Jaca in Spain,
PyeongChang in Korea, Salzburg in Austria, Sarajevo in
Bosnia-Herzegovina and Vancouver in Canada.
LONDON 2012
Games of the XXX Olympiad
From the 27th July to 12th August 2012

ELECTION

The host city for the Games of the XXX Olympiad will be the city of
London. Following four rounds of voting by members of the
International Olympic Committee (IOC), today, at the 117th IOC Session,
in Singapore, London eventually triumphed by taking 54 votes from a
possible 104. This gave London the majority that it needed to be
elected as the host city for the 2012 Games. London had to overcome
stiff competition, however, in the form of Paris, New York, Moscow and
Madrid in its bid to get the Games.
SOCHI 2014 OLYMPICS HOTEL ROOMS
SOCHI 2014
XXI Olympic Winter Games
February 2014

Sochi Elected as Host City of XXII Olympic Winter Games


© IOC/R. Juilliart
4 July 2007

The city of Sochi has been elected as the host city for the XXII Olympic Winter Games in 2014. The announcement has just been made by
IOC President Jacques Rogge in Guatemala City, where the IOC members are meeting.  Sochi was elected in the second round of voting with
51 votes against 47 votes for PyeongChang.

Unsurpassed Excellence
The vision of Sochi 2014 is to unite the resources of the city of Sochi, the Krasnodar region and the Russian nation to develop in Sochi
greatly needed sports and resort infrastructure, in a sustainable, inclusive, environmentally responsible manner. Their goal is to deliver
Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games of unsurpassed excellence for the athletes, the Olympic family, the Paralympic family and the world.

Inspire and Energise
The Sochi 2014 Games will provide a new gateway for winter sport in Russia. Part of its legacy will look to establish Russia’s first
international-quality training and competition facilities for Alpine skiing, sliding sports and ski jumping. The facilities in Sochi will inspire the
youth of the nation and energise the growth of winter sports, serving not only Russian athletes but also those of an entire region. All the key
Olympic infrastructure locations in Sochi have been selected to ensure maximum sustainability and legacy after the Games by addressing
existing sport, tourism and commercial infrastructure needs.

Venues
Sochi 2014 will provide the Olympic Movement with a “once-in-a-lifetime” Winter Games experience. The Sochi Olympic Park will offer an
innovative solution, situated on the Black Sea coast in an area designated for significant development. It will include all ice venues, the
Olympic Stadium, the Main Media Centre (MMC), and the main Olympic Village. It has been designed by experienced Olympic planners to
offer athletes and officials, the IOC, the media, the sponsors and spectators extraordinary convenience and opportunities to enjoy the
Games. The mountain venues will be only 49 km away from the coastal cluster and are located in the mountain region of Krasnaya Polyana,
or “Red Meadow”. The mountain venues are also clustered within a single valley, making travel times short.

The Vote
The IOC members made their choice for 2014 based on not only the candidature files and presentations made today by the delegations from
Sochi (Russia), Salzburg (Austria) and PyeongChang (Republic of Korea)*, but also on the basis of the detailed report and presentation made
by the IOC’s Evaluation Commission for the 2014 Olympic Winter Games, which was chaired by IOC member Chiharu Igaya.

*Cities are listed in the order of drawing of lots

Results of the vote:

Round 1
Sochi: 34
Salzburg: 25
PyeongChang: 36

Round 2
Sochi: 51
PyeongChang: 47
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