Östersund bid for the 2002 Winter Olympics

Bids for the
2002 (2002) Winter Olympics and Paralympics
Overview
XIX Olympic Winter Games
VIII Paralympic Winter Games
Salt Lake City
Sion · Quebec City
Details
City Östersund, Sweden
NOC Swedish Olympic Committee (SWE)
Previous Games hosted
None,
previously bid for 1994 and 1998 Winter Games
Decision
Result shortlisted
2002 Winter Olympics

Östersund 2002 was an unsuccessful bid by Östersund, Sweden, and the Swedish Olympic Committee to host the 2002 Winter Olympics. The city bid for the third consecutive time, and it was sixth time that Sweden had submitted a bid.

Venues

Åre Ski Area, planned for alpine skiing

The proposed venues concept comprised two main areas:[1]

Östersund

Åre

Bid's evaluation

The IOC evaluation report praised the support by both Swedish government and the Östersund residents (the poll showed 70% support). The overall games and transport concept were considered excellent, as many venues were already homologated by the FIS, and the competitions would have been staged in two main zones one an hour by road from the other, or just 40 minutes by train. The airport is located just 15 minutes away. Other issues rated favorably were: a single Olympic Village which would form part of an urban development project on the lakeside, excellent facilities planned for the media, and 780 million USD budget guaranteed by the Swedish government.

However, the evaluation report listed some problems that might have occurred. The ski jumps were planned to be constructed, but the amount of space reserved for seating would have to be reviewed, as the commission deemed it inadequate to cope with 40,000 spectators. Environmental impact assessment had not been carried out for several sport venues and the site chosen for bob and luge track was in a residential area, which might have caused problems with access and spectator capacity.

Aftermath

During the 104th IOC meeting held in Budapest the bid got 14 votes and lost in the first round to Salt Lake City.

Candidature files

References

Notes
  1. "Four candidates for 2002" (PDF). The International Olympic Committee. p. 6. Retrieved 15 July 2014.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/9/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.