< HOMEPAGE
|

Olympic Fans
International sports enthusiasts can visit the history of the Olympic Games in Canada, and get a glimpse of the future.
Canada hosted its first Olympic Games in Montreal, Quebec in 1976. 
The Olympic Stadium in Montreal features the world's tallest inclined tower-it is 574 feet (175 m) high.  The vision of the architect who planned the stadium was nearly impossible to achieve, however.  The stadium's retractable roof was not completed until 1987, more than 10 years after the event for which it was designed.
The velodrome built for the 1976 Games was re-purposed for education in 1992 and is now known as the Biod Visitors to the museum will experience four typical indigenous American environments: the polar region, a tropical forest, the St. Lawrence marine, and the Laurentian forest.
In 1988, Calgary, Alberta hosted the 15th Winter Olympiad and profited mightily from it (unlike Montreal, which is still paying for that stadium roof!).  The Olympic Oval is a fully equipped training facility used by skaters, runners, hockey players, and athletes of all stripes.  Nearby Canada Olympic Park is the home of North America's largest Olympic museum, the Olympic Hall of Fame.  The Park is also home to Canada's only Olympic bobsled/luge track.  Adventurous visitors willing to sign a waiver can even buy a trip down the track in a sled driven by one of the park's trained drivers.
Canada will again be hosting the Winter Olympics, this time in Vancouver, British Columbia, in 2010.  The city has already begun preparations for the big event.  Omega, Official Timekeeper of the 2010 Games, unveiled a three-year countdown clock in downtown Vancouver on February 12, 2007.  Construction of the Vancouver Olympic Village will begin in the summer of 2007.  The Games facilities will be made available to athletes for training by Winter 2007/2008.
< Back To Travel in canada                                          Next
                                          Previous
|