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2028 Summer Olympics

The 2028 Summer Olympics, officially known as the Games of the XXXIV Olympiad, and commonly known as Los Angeles 2028 or LA28 is an upcoming international multi-sport event scheduled to take place from July 14 to July 30, 2028 in and around Los Angeles, California, United States.[2]

Games of the XXXIV Olympiad
One of several emblems of the 2028 Summer Olympics
Host cityLos Angeles, United States
MottoTogether we create the future
OpeningJuly 14, 2028[1]
ClosingJuly 30, 2028
Stadium
Summer
Winter
2028 Summer Paralympics

Los Angeles had originally bid for the 2024 Summer Olympics. However, after multiple withdrawals that left only Los Angeles and Paris in contention, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) approved a process to concurrently award the 2024 and 2028 Summer Olympics to the two remaining candidates, with Los Angeles preferred as the 2028 host. Los Angeles was formally awarded the Games at the 131st IOC Session in Lima, Peru, on September 13, 2017. They will mark the fifth Summer Olympics, and ninth Olympics overall, to be hosted by the United States. Having previously hosted the Summer Olympics in 1932 and 1984, Los Angeles will become the third three-time host city after London and Paris, and the first North American city ever to do so.

The IOC has provisionally removed boxing, modern pentathlon, and weightlifting from the program of 28 "core" Olympic events, and has proposed to add skateboarding, sport climbing, and surfing — which were included in the programs of the 2020 and 2024 Games as optional sports.[3] The organizing committee can additionally introduce new sports specifically for these Games as part of the IOC's 2020 agenda. Baseball/softball, cricket, lacrosse, flag football, and other sports are on the shortlist.[4]

Bidding process

On September 16, 2015, the International Olympic Committee announced the candidature process and the five candidate cities for the 2024 Games: Budapest, Hamburg, Los Angeles, Paris, and Rome.[5] Budapest, Hamburg, and Rome eventually withdrew, leaving only Los Angeles and Paris.[6] A similar situation had already occurred during the bidding for the 2022 Winter Olympics when Krakow, Lviv, Oslo, and Stockholm withdrew, resulting in a two-way decision between Beijing, China, and Almaty, Kazakhstan, with Beijing ultimately declared the winner. On April 3, 2017, at the IOC convention in Denmark, Olympic officials met with bid committees from Los Angeles and Paris to discuss the possibility of naming two winners in the competition to host the 2024 Summer Games.

After these withdrawals, the IOC Executive Board met in Lausanne, Switzerland, on June 9, 2017, to discuss the 2024 and 2028 bid processes.[7] The IOC formally proposed electing the 2024 and 2028 host cities at the same time in 2017, a proposal that an Extraordinary IOC Session approved on July 11, 2017, in Lausanne. The IOC set up a process where the Los Angeles and Paris 2024 bid committees and the IOC, held meetings in July 2017 to decide which city would host in each of the two years.[8]

Following the decision to award the 2024 and 2028 Games simultaneously, Paris was understood to be preferred for the 2024 Games. On July 31, 2017, the IOC announced Los Angeles as the sole candidate for 2028, with $1.8 billion of additional funding from the IOC,[9] allowing Paris to be confirmed as the host for 2024. On August 11, 2017, Los Angeles City Council voted unanimously to approve the bid.[10] On September 11, 2017, Los Angeles received formal approval from the IOC's evaluation commission.[11] On September 13, 2017, Los Angeles was formally awarded the 2028 Games following a unanimous vote by the IOC.[12] The IOC praised the LA bid for using a record-breaking number of existing and temporary facilities and for relying entirely on corporate funding.[13][14]

On October 16, 2017, Los Angeles 2028 received official support from the state of California.[15] On August 29, 2018, Olympic officials arrived for a two-day visit that included meetings with local organizers and a tour of the city's newest venues.[16] LMU and LA Times polls suggest that more than 88% of Angelenos are in favor of the city's hosting the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games.[17]

2028 Summer Olympics
bidding results
City Nation Votes
Los Angeles   United States Unanimous

Development and preparations

Venue construction and renovations

 
Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum
 
Interior view of SoFi Stadium at Hollywood Park

While most host cities have between six and seven years to prepare for the Olympic Games, Los Angeles will get an additional four, giving the city eleven years. The Los Angeles bid relied on a majority of existing venues; other venues that are already under construction or were planned regardless of the Games. BMO Stadium, which opened in 2018 as the home of Major League Soccer's Los Angeles FC, will host football (soccer) and several events in athletics. SoFi Stadium, which opened in 2020 as the home of the NFL's Los Angeles Rams and Los Angeles Chargers, will host the main opening ceremony, football, and archery.

The Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum underwent a major renovation and restoration program from 2017 to 2019.[18] A new press box, loge boxes, and club seats were installed.[19] This reduced stadium capacity from 93,607 to 78,467.[20] As the athletics venue, future renovations include the re-installation of an athletics track.

The Los Angeles Clippers are building a new basketball arena in Inglewood near SoFi Stadium, called Intuit Dome, which began construction in September 2021 and is expected to be completed in 2024.[21] Team owner Steve Ballmer stated during its groundbreaking that he hoped that it could be included in the Games.[22]

The Crypto.com Arena will undergo renovations which will be completed by 2024, four years prior to when the arena hosts the Olympic basketball competition.[23]

Infrastructure

 
Metro E Line train in Downtown Los Angeles

The Twenty-eight by '28 initiative is an effort set forth by Mayor Eric Garcetti that the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority complete 28 transit infrastructure projects before the start of the Games.[24] Most of these projects were already in the planning stages during the bid, but will receive accelerated priority, while several minor new projects were programmed with the initiative.

The K Line opened to revenue service on October 7, 2022 after multiple delays from a planned opening in 2019.[25][26] It links the Crenshaw District, Inglewood and Westchester. The K Line will also connect to a people mover being constructed since early 2018 to link Los Angeles International Airport with the LAX/Metro Transit Center station, with opening anticipated in 2024.[27][28] The Inglewood Transit Connector is another people mover planned to provide transportation between the K line and the Olympic venues in Inglewood.[29]

While various infrastructure improvements were planned regardless of the outcome of the Los Angeles Olympic bid, the extension of the Metro D Line will be expedited to serve the Olympics. Three phases were created to extend the line. The first phase will extend the D Line from the Wilshire/Western station to the new Wilshire/La Cienega station. This phase will be completed by 2024. The second phase will extend the D Line to Century City by 2025, while the third and final phase will extend the line to the West Los Angeles VA Medical Center in Westwood with a completion date set for 2027. The third phase will also include a station adjoining the UCLA campus, connecting Olympic Village and Pauley Pavilion with venues in downtown Los Angeles.[30][31] Currently phase one, two and three broke ground and are under construction. Construction began in 2019 and remains on schedule.[30][32][33]

The Regional Connector in downtown Los Angeles will be complete in 2023. The project will connect the Metro E Line, which already links venues in downtown Santa Monica to venues at Exposition Park and in downtown Los Angeles, to the Metro L Line. This will allow for direct rail service between Santa Monica and East Los Angeles. The Regional Connector will also link the Metro A Line with the Metro L Line, connecting the Long Beach area and San Gabriel Valley via downtown.[34][35]

These infrastructure improvements, among others, are being funded by Measure R, a temporary half-cent sales tax increase, and Measure M, a continuation of Measure R's tax increase plus an additional permanent half-cent sales tax increase, both tax measures applicable to Los Angeles County.[36] Measure R was approved by voters in November 2008 and Measure M was approved by voters in November 2016.[36]

Budget

In April 2019, the estimated cost of the Games was assessed as being approximately $6.88 billion with all the money coming from the private sector, although the Los Angeles city council and state of California legislators have agreed to serve as a "financial backstop." The organizers adjusted the budget for inflation after LA, which originally bid for the 2024 Games, agreed to wait four more years.[37][38]

The City of Los Angeles is the lead public guarantor, committing to spend up to $250 million to cover shortfalls. In 2016, the California legislature took action so that the Governor is empowered to negotiate the next $250 million in public backup, but only after the city backup money has been used first. LA 2024 also agreed to purchase a wide range of insurance policies, including natural disaster, terrorism, event cancellation, as well as reduced ticket sales. The games are expected to generate as much as they cost, with $2.5 billion coming in through sponsorships and nearly $2 billion earned through ticket sales. Average ticket prices for the games will range between $13 and $457 (in 2016 dollars).[38]

The federal government will designate the Olympics a National Special Security Event (NSSE) in which the US Secret Service heads a single chain of command.[38] The US federal government will also cover the cost of security, with an agreement signed by the LA organizing committee and Department of Homeland Security in February 2020, but it will not be involved in the Games' funding, covering only the aforementioned security costs.[39]

Venues

Under present IOC policy, venues with corporate naming rights will not be allowed to use their sponsored name during the Olympics.[40]

Sports parks

There will be four "sports parks" throughout the city to host events at existing, temporary, and planned venues, as well as venues already under construction. The most prominent of the four locations will be the Downtown Sports Park, which will host events at various venues in Downtown Los Angeles. The Downtown Sports Park will host events including swimming, diving, football, badminton, road cycling, fencing, taekwondo and basketball at Los Angeles City Hall and Grand Park, the Los Angeles Convention Center, Crypto.com Arena, Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, and the campus of the University of Southern California. In addition to sporting events, the Downtown Sports Park will also host the Main Press Center, Media Village, and Olympic Family Hotels, and serve as the venue for the Opening and Closing Ceremonies.[41]

Additional sports parks include the Valley Sports Park, South Bay Sports Park, and the Long Beach Sports Park.[41]

Downtown Sports Park

Various venues in Downtown Los Angeles.

Venue Events Capacity Status
BMO Stadium Football (preliminaries, quarterfinals, women's bronze medal) 22,000 Existing
Athletics (discus, javelin, and hammer first rounds) 20,000
Crypto.com Arena Basketball (men's preliminaries, finals) 18,000
Dedeaux Field (USC) Swimming, diving, artistic swimming Temporary structure on existing site
Figueroa Street[42] Live site: "Olympic Way" – Street art, vendors and entertainment connecting USC and L.A. Live in Downtown Los Angeles Temporary
Galen Center (USC) Badminton 10,300 Existing
Grand Park Marathon 5,000
Race walk
Road cycling
Los Angeles Convention Center Basketball (women's preliminaries) 8,000
Fencing 7,000
Taekwondo
Table tennis 5,000
Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum Athletics (except some field events) 77,500
Opening and closing ceremonies
USC Village Media Village, Main Press Center

Valley Sports Park

The Valley Sports Park host events at temporary venues in the Sepulveda Basin Recreation Center in the San Fernando Valley.

Venue Events Capacity Status
Sepulveda Basin Park Canoe slalom 8,000 Planned construction
Equestrian 15,000 Temporary
Shooting 3,000

South Bay Sports Park

 
Dignity Health Sports Park Center

The South Bay Sports Park will be located on the campus of California State University, Dominguez Hills in Carson, California.

Venue Events Capacity Status
Dignity Health Sports Park - Main Stadium Rugby 30,000 Existing
Modern pentathlon
Dignity Health Sports Park - Tennis Stadium Tennis 10,000 (Center Court)
Dignity Health Sports Park - Track and Field Facility Field hockey 15,000 (primary field)
5,000 (secondary field)
VELO Sports Center Track cycling 6,000

Long Beach Sports Park

 
Long Beach

The Long Beach Sports Park will host events along the Long Beach waterfront in Long Beach, California.

Venue Events Capacity Status
Long Beach Waterfront BMX racing 6,000 Temporary
Water polo 8,000
Triathlon 2,000 Existing
Open water swimming
Long Beach Arena Handball 12,000
Belmont Veterans Memorial Pier Sailing 6,000
Long Beach Marine Stadium Rowing
Canoe sprint
TBD

Westside

Various venues in the Westside of Los Angeles, CA.

 
Riviera Country Club
 
The Kia Forum
Venue Events Capacity Status
Santa Monica State Beach and Venice Beach Beach volleyball 12,000 Temporary
Skateboarding 10,000 Existing
Surfing 8,000
3x3 basketball
Riviera Country Club Golf 30,000
UCLA Olympic Village and
Olympic Village Training Center
N/A
Pauley Pavilion (UCLA) Wrestling 12,500
Judo
SoFi Stadium Opening/closing ceremonies 70,000–100,000
Football (men's quarterfinals, women's semifinals, men's final)
Rivers Lake @ SoFi Stadium Archery 8,000 Temporary
Kia Forum Gymnastics 17,000 Existing

Southern California venues

Various venues in the Greater Los Angeles area.

 
UCLA student housing site of the Olympic Village
Venue Location Events Capacity Status
Rose Bowl Pasadena Football (women's quarterfinals, men's semifinals, women's final, men's 3rd place) 92,000 Existing
Frank G. Bonelli Regional Park San Dimas Mountain biking 3,000 Temporary
Honda Center Anaheim Volleyball 18,000 Existing
Brokaw News Center/Universal Studios Lot Universal City International Broadcast Center/Main Press Center[43]

Potential football venues

 
The Rose Bowl

According to the initial bid book for the Los Angeles 2024 Olympics, football venues are to be situated within Los Angeles Metropolitan Area and other main cities of California. The organizing committee's responsibility is to choose from four to six venues to host the tournament. According to the official website of the local organizing committee, eight venues are under consideration, all within California.[44]

Potential venues in Los Angeles County
class=notpageimage|
Location of potential football facilities in the San Francisco Bay area
Potential venues in the San Francisco Bay area
class=notpageimage|
Location of potential football facilities in San Diego
Potential venues in San Diego County

The Games

Sports

 
For the first time, surfing was included in the IOC's list of 28 core sports for the Olympics after having been an optional sport at the previous two Games.

Under current IOC policies, the program of the Summer Olympics consists of 28 core sports that persist between Games, with other three to six slots able to be filled with backing of the IOC and organizing committee in order to improve local interest,[45][46] provided that the total number of participants does not exceed 10,500 athletes.[47]

On December 9, 2021, the IOC stated that boxing, modern pentathlon, and weightlifting had been removed from the initial program for the 2028 Summer Olympics, and would only be included if their respective governing bodies resolve issues raised by the IOC by 2023.[48] In particular, the International Boxing Association (AIBA) has faced ongoing governance issues (which resulted in boxing at the 2020 Summer Olympics being overseen by an external task force),[49] the International Weightlifting Federation has faced issues with doping and governance (resulting in weightlifting being considered "provisional" for the 2024 Summer Olympics),[49] while the Union Internationale de Pentathlon Moderne (UIPM) must also finalize and seek approval for their proposed replacement of show jumping in the modern pentathlon.[50] The UIPM tested obstacle course racing at an event in late-June 2022.[51][52]

Additionally, the IOC executive board has proposed that skateboarding, sport climbing, and surfing be promoted to the core program of the 2028 Summer Olympics; the three sports successfully debuted as optional sports at the 2020 Summer Olympics, and are expected to return in the same capacity in 2024.[50][53]

2028 Summer Olympic Sports Program

Optional sports

In August 2022, it was announced that nine sports had made the shortlist for inclusion in the Games, with presentations expected to be made later that month.[54][55] The sports are:

There is no limit as to the number of sports the IOC can add, but the organizing committee is not obligated to include these sports, and the IOC has set an athlete quota at 10,500 athletes.

Each sport must also meet the following criteria list for the possibility of inclusion:[56]

  • Prioritizing a reduction in the cost and complexity of hosting the Games.
  • Engaging the best athletes and sports that put athlete health and safety first.
  • Recognizing global appeal to fans across the world, and host country interest.
  • Prioritizing gender equality and youth relevance to engage new fans and athletes.
  • Upholding integrity and fairness to support clean sports.
  • Supporting environmental sustainability to foster long-term sustainability.

A final decision is expected to be made at the 140th IOC Session in Mumbai in 2023.

Ceremonies

In January 2017, it was reported that the bid committee had proposed holding the opening and closing ceremonies at both SoFi Stadium and the historic Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, in an acknowledgement of its role in the 1932 and 1984 Olympics. The plans called the final leg of the torch relay to be ceremonially launched from the Coliseum, a simulcast of the opening ceremony proper at SoFi Stadium for those in attendance, and the ceremonial re-lighting of the historic Olympic cauldron at the stadium once the cauldron is lit in Inglewood. The closing ceremony would be held in reverse, with opening segments at SoFi Stadium, and the official protocol held at the Coliseum. The proposal is unprecedented and would mark the first time two major venues are featured in the opening and closing ceremonies. The final plan is pending per IOC approval.[57]

Marketing

Emblem

On September 1, 2020, the LA organizing committee unveiled the emblem for the 2028 Summer Olympics, featuring the characters "LA" and "28" in a stacked layout. The "A" in "LA" is designed to be interchangeable, with variations created in collaboration with athletes, artists, designers, celebrities, and other figures (such as musician Billie Eilish, Indian-Canadian comedian Lilly Singh, and actress Reese Witherspoon).[58][59] There is also a variation derived from the "Stars in Motion" emblem of the 1984 Summer Olympics.[60]

Organizing committee chairman Casey Wasserman explained that the multitude of variations was intended to "showcase our community's collective creativity and celebrate the diversity that makes us strong", as the city "defies a singular identity". Chief marketing officer Amy Gleeson stated that the emblem was designed to "foster a deeper connection with the audience who will be in their 20s and 30s when the games happen."[58][59][61][62][60]

Broadcasting rights

In the United States, the Games will be broadcast by NBCUniversal, as part of a long-term contract with the IOC through 2032.[63] The Universal Studios Lot is planned to be the site of the International Broadcast Centre for the Games.[43] In addition, NBCUniversal and the organizing committee will coordinate numerous sponsorship sales for the Games, and parent company Comcast will be promoted as a founding partner of Los Angeles 2028 as part of a renewed sponsorship agreement with the United States Olympic & Paralympic Committee (USOPC).[64][65]

On January 16, 2023, the IOC renewed its European pay television and streaming rights agreements with Warner Bros. Discovery through 2032, covering 49 European territories. The IOC concurrently reached a deal for free-to-air coverage with the European Broadcasting Union (EBU), whose member broadcasters will carry at least 200 hours of coverage of the 2028 Summer Olympics.[66]

See also

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External links

  • "Los Angeles 2028". Olympics.com. International Olympic Committee.
  • LA 2028

Candidature files

  • Stage 1: Vision, Games Concept and Strategy
  • Stage 2: Governance, Legal and Venue Funding
    • Budget released Dec. 2nd, 2016
  • Stage 3: Games Delivery, Experience, and Venue Legacy
    Summer Olympics
    Preceded by XXXIV Olympiad
    Los Angeles

    2028
    Succeeded by

    2028, summer, olympics, 2028, olympics, angeles, 2028, la28, redirect, here, summer, paralympics, 2028, summer, paralympics, officially, known, games, xxxiv, olympiad, commonly, known, angeles, 2028, la28, upcoming, international, multi, sport, event, schedule. 2028 Olympics Los Angeles 2028 and LA28 redirect here For the Summer Paralympics see 2028 Summer Paralympics The 2028 Summer Olympics officially known as the Games of the XXXIV Olympiad and commonly known as Los Angeles 2028 or LA28 is an upcoming international multi sport event scheduled to take place from July 14 to July 30 2028 in and around Los Angeles California United States 2 Games of the XXXIV OlympiadOne of several emblems of the 2028 Summer OlympicsHost cityLos Angeles United StatesMottoTogether we create the futureOpeningJuly 14 2028 1 ClosingJuly 30 2028StadiumLos Angeles Memorial ColiseumSoFi StadiumSummer Paris 2024Brisbane 2032 Winter Milano Cortina 2026TBD 2030 2028 Summer ParalympicsLos Angeles had originally bid for the 2024 Summer Olympics However after multiple withdrawals that left only Los Angeles and Paris in contention the International Olympic Committee IOC approved a process to concurrently award the 2024 and 2028 Summer Olympics to the two remaining candidates with Los Angeles preferred as the 2028 host Los Angeles was formally awarded the Games at the 131st IOC Session in Lima Peru on September 13 2017 They will mark the fifth Summer Olympics and ninth Olympics overall to be hosted by the United States Having previously hosted the Summer Olympics in 1932 and 1984 Los Angeles will become the third three time host city after London and Paris and the first North American city ever to do so The IOC has provisionally removed boxing modern pentathlon and weightlifting from the program of 28 core Olympic events and has proposed to add skateboarding sport climbing and surfing which were included in the programs of the 2020 and 2024 Games as optional sports 3 The organizing committee can additionally introduce new sports specifically for these Games as part of the IOC s 2020 agenda Baseball softball cricket lacrosse flag football and other sports are on the shortlist 4 Contents 1 Bidding process 2 Development and preparations 2 1 Venue construction and renovations 2 2 Infrastructure 2 3 Budget 3 Venues 3 1 Sports parks 3 2 Downtown Sports Park 3 3 Valley Sports Park 3 4 South Bay Sports Park 3 5 Long Beach Sports Park 3 6 Westside 3 7 Southern California venues 3 8 Potential football venues 4 The Games 4 1 Sports 4 2 Optional sports 4 3 Ceremonies 5 Marketing 5 1 Emblem 6 Broadcasting rights 7 See also 8 References 9 External links 9 1 Candidature filesBidding process EditMain article Bids for the 2024 and 2028 Summer Olympics On September 16 2015 the International Olympic Committee announced the candidature process and the five candidate cities for the 2024 Games Budapest Hamburg Los Angeles Paris and Rome 5 Budapest Hamburg and Rome eventually withdrew leaving only Los Angeles and Paris 6 A similar situation had already occurred during the bidding for the 2022 Winter Olympics when Krakow Lviv Oslo and Stockholm withdrew resulting in a two way decision between Beijing China and Almaty Kazakhstan with Beijing ultimately declared the winner On April 3 2017 at the IOC convention in Denmark Olympic officials met with bid committees from Los Angeles and Paris to discuss the possibility of naming two winners in the competition to host the 2024 Summer Games After these withdrawals the IOC Executive Board met in Lausanne Switzerland on June 9 2017 to discuss the 2024 and 2028 bid processes 7 The IOC formally proposed electing the 2024 and 2028 host cities at the same time in 2017 a proposal that an Extraordinary IOC Session approved on July 11 2017 in Lausanne The IOC set up a process where the Los Angeles and Paris 2024 bid committees and the IOC held meetings in July 2017 to decide which city would host in each of the two years 8 Following the decision to award the 2024 and 2028 Games simultaneously Paris was understood to be preferred for the 2024 Games On July 31 2017 the IOC announced Los Angeles as the sole candidate for 2028 with 1 8 billion of additional funding from the IOC 9 allowing Paris to be confirmed as the host for 2024 On August 11 2017 Los Angeles City Council voted unanimously to approve the bid 10 On September 11 2017 Los Angeles received formal approval from the IOC s evaluation commission 11 On September 13 2017 Los Angeles was formally awarded the 2028 Games following a unanimous vote by the IOC 12 The IOC praised the LA bid for using a record breaking number of existing and temporary facilities and for relying entirely on corporate funding 13 14 On October 16 2017 Los Angeles 2028 received official support from the state of California 15 On August 29 2018 Olympic officials arrived for a two day visit that included meetings with local organizers and a tour of the city s newest venues 16 LMU and LA Times polls suggest that more than 88 of Angelenos are in favor of the city s hosting the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games 17 2028 Summer Olympicsbidding results City Nation VotesLos Angeles United States UnanimousDevelopment and preparations EditVenue construction and renovations Edit Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum Interior view of SoFi Stadium at Hollywood Park While most host cities have between six and seven years to prepare for the Olympic Games Los Angeles will get an additional four giving the city eleven years The Los Angeles bid relied on a majority of existing venues other venues that are already under construction or were planned regardless of the Games BMO Stadium which opened in 2018 as the home of Major League Soccer s Los Angeles FC will host football soccer and several events in athletics SoFi Stadium which opened in 2020 as the home of the NFL s Los Angeles Rams and Los Angeles Chargers will host the main opening ceremony football and archery The Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum underwent a major renovation and restoration program from 2017 to 2019 18 A new press box loge boxes and club seats were installed 19 This reduced stadium capacity from 93 607 to 78 467 20 As the athletics venue future renovations include the re installation of an athletics track The Los Angeles Clippers are building a new basketball arena in Inglewood near SoFi Stadium called Intuit Dome which began construction in September 2021 and is expected to be completed in 2024 21 Team owner Steve Ballmer stated during its groundbreaking that he hoped that it could be included in the Games 22 The Crypto com Arena will undergo renovations which will be completed by 2024 four years prior to when the arena hosts the Olympic basketball competition 23 Infrastructure Edit Metro E Line train in Downtown Los Angeles Main article Twenty eight by 28 The Twenty eight by 28 initiative is an effort set forth by Mayor Eric Garcetti that the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority complete 28 transit infrastructure projects before the start of the Games 24 Most of these projects were already in the planning stages during the bid but will receive accelerated priority while several minor new projects were programmed with the initiative The K Line opened to revenue service on October 7 2022 after multiple delays from a planned opening in 2019 25 26 It links the Crenshaw District Inglewood and Westchester The K Line will also connect to a people mover being constructed since early 2018 to link Los Angeles International Airport with the LAX Metro Transit Center station with opening anticipated in 2024 27 28 The Inglewood Transit Connector is another people mover planned to provide transportation between the K line and the Olympic venues in Inglewood 29 While various infrastructure improvements were planned regardless of the outcome of the Los Angeles Olympic bid the extension of the Metro D Line will be expedited to serve the Olympics Three phases were created to extend the line The first phase will extend the D Line from the Wilshire Western station to the new Wilshire La Cienega station This phase will be completed by 2024 The second phase will extend the D Line to Century City by 2025 while the third and final phase will extend the line to the West Los Angeles VA Medical Center in Westwood with a completion date set for 2027 The third phase will also include a station adjoining the UCLA campus connecting Olympic Village and Pauley Pavilion with venues in downtown Los Angeles 30 31 Currently phase one two and three broke ground and are under construction Construction began in 2019 and remains on schedule 30 32 33 The Regional Connector in downtown Los Angeles will be complete in 2023 The project will connect the Metro E Line which already links venues in downtown Santa Monica to venues at Exposition Park and in downtown Los Angeles to the Metro L Line This will allow for direct rail service between Santa Monica and East Los Angeles The Regional Connector will also link the Metro A Line with the Metro L Line connecting the Long Beach area and San Gabriel Valley via downtown 34 35 These infrastructure improvements among others are being funded by Measure R a temporary half cent sales tax increase and Measure M a continuation of Measure R s tax increase plus an additional permanent half cent sales tax increase both tax measures applicable to Los Angeles County 36 Measure R was approved by voters in November 2008 and Measure M was approved by voters in November 2016 36 Budget Edit In April 2019 the estimated cost of the Games was assessed as being approximately 6 88 billion with all the money coming from the private sector although the Los Angeles city council and state of California legislators have agreed to serve as a financial backstop The organizers adjusted the budget for inflation after LA which originally bid for the 2024 Games agreed to wait four more years 37 38 The City of Los Angeles is the lead public guarantor committing to spend up to 250 million to cover shortfalls In 2016 the California legislature took action so that the Governor is empowered to negotiate the next 250 million in public backup but only after the city backup money has been used first LA 2024 also agreed to purchase a wide range of insurance policies including natural disaster terrorism event cancellation as well as reduced ticket sales The games are expected to generate as much as they cost with 2 5 billion coming in through sponsorships and nearly 2 billion earned through ticket sales Average ticket prices for the games will range between 13 and 457 in 2016 dollars 38 The federal government will designate the Olympics a National Special Security Event NSSE in which the US Secret Service heads a single chain of command 38 The US federal government will also cover the cost of security with an agreement signed by the LA organizing committee and Department of Homeland Security in February 2020 but it will not be involved in the Games funding covering only the aforementioned security costs 39 Venues EditUnder present IOC policy venues with corporate naming rights will not be allowed to use their sponsored name during the Olympics 40 Sports parks Edit There will be four sports parks throughout the city to host events at existing temporary and planned venues as well as venues already under construction The most prominent of the four locations will be the Downtown Sports Park which will host events at various venues in Downtown Los Angeles The Downtown Sports Park will host events including swimming diving football badminton road cycling fencing taekwondo and basketball at Los Angeles City Hall and Grand Park the Los Angeles Convention Center Crypto com Arena Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum and the campus of the University of Southern California In addition to sporting events the Downtown Sports Park will also host the Main Press Center Media Village and Olympic Family Hotels and serve as the venue for the Opening and Closing Ceremonies 41 Additional sports parks include the Valley Sports Park South Bay Sports Park and the Long Beach Sports Park 41 Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum Olympic Cauldron BMO Stadium Night view of Crypto com ArenaDowntown Sports Park Edit Various venues in Downtown Los Angeles Venue Events Capacity StatusBMO Stadium Football preliminaries quarterfinals women s bronze medal 22 000 ExistingAthletics discus javelin and hammer first rounds 20 000Crypto com Arena Basketball men s preliminaries finals 18 000Dedeaux Field USC Swimming diving artistic swimming Temporary structure on existing siteFigueroa Street 42 Live site Olympic Way Street art vendors and entertainment connecting USC and L A Live in Downtown Los Angeles TemporaryGalen Center USC Badminton 10 300 ExistingGrand Park Marathon 5 000Race walkRoad cyclingLos Angeles Convention Center Basketball women s preliminaries 8 000Fencing 7 000TaekwondoTable tennis 5 000Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum Athletics except some field events 77 500Opening and closing ceremoniesUSC Village Media Village Main Press Center Valley Sports Park Edit LA Convention Center Downtown Sports Park Valley Sports Park South Bay Sports Park Long Beach Sports Park Santa Monica Beach Venice Beach Riviera Country Club UCLA The Forum SoFi Stadium Rose Bowl Bonelli Park Dodger Stadium Anaheim Sports Area Universalclass notpageimage Location of the facilities in the Los Angeles area The Valley Sports Park host events at temporary venues in the Sepulveda Basin Recreation Center in the San Fernando Valley Venue Events Capacity StatusSepulveda Basin Park Canoe slalom 8 000 Planned constructionEquestrian 15 000 TemporaryShooting 3 000South Bay Sports Park Edit Dignity Health Sports Park Center The South Bay Sports Park will be located on the campus of California State University Dominguez Hills in Carson California Venue Events Capacity StatusDignity Health Sports Park Main Stadium Rugby 30 000 ExistingModern pentathlonDignity Health Sports Park Tennis Stadium Tennis 10 000 Center Court Dignity Health Sports Park Track and Field Facility Field hockey 15 000 primary field 5 000 secondary field VELO Sports Center Track cycling 6 000Long Beach Sports Park Edit Long Beach The Long Beach Sports Park will host events along the Long Beach waterfront in Long Beach California Venue Events Capacity StatusLong Beach Waterfront BMX racing 6 000 TemporaryWater polo 8 000Triathlon 2 000 ExistingOpen water swimmingLong Beach Arena Handball 12 000Belmont Veterans Memorial Pier Sailing 6 000Long Beach Marine Stadium Rowing Canoe sprint TBDWestside Edit Various venues in the Westside of Los Angeles CA Riviera Country Club The Kia Forum Venue Events Capacity StatusSanta Monica State Beach and Venice Beach Beach volleyball 12 000 TemporarySkateboarding 10 000 ExistingSurfing 8 0003x3 basketball Riviera Country Club Golf 30 000UCLA Olympic Village andOlympic Village Training Center N APauley Pavilion UCLA Wrestling 12 500JudoSoFi Stadium Opening closing ceremonies 70 000 100 000Football men s quarterfinals women s semifinals men s final Rivers Lake SoFi Stadium Archery 8 000 TemporaryKia Forum Gymnastics 17 000 ExistingSouthern California venues Edit Various venues in the Greater Los Angeles area UCLA student housing site of the Olympic Village Venue Location Events Capacity StatusRose Bowl Pasadena Football women s quarterfinals men s semifinals women s final men s 3rd place 92 000 ExistingFrank G Bonelli Regional Park San Dimas Mountain biking 3 000 TemporaryHonda Center Anaheim Volleyball 18 000 ExistingBrokaw News Center Universal Studios Lot Universal City International Broadcast Center Main Press Center 43 Potential football venues Edit The Rose Bowl According to the initial bid book for the Los Angeles 2024 Olympics football venues are to be situated within Los Angeles Metropolitan Area and other main cities of California The organizing committee s responsibility is to choose from four to six venues to host the tournament According to the official website of the local organizing committee eight venues are under consideration all within California 44 Potential venues in Los Angeles CountyRose Bowl Pasadena 92 542 capacity 3 group matches quarterfinals semifinals and women s final SoFi Stadium Inglewood 72 000 3 group matches quarterfinals semifinals and men s final BMO Stadium Exposition Park 22 000 8 group matches Levi s Stadium California Memorial Stadium Stanford Stadium Paypal Parkclass notpageimage Location of potential football facilities in the San Francisco Bay area Potential venues in the San Francisco Bay areaLevi s Stadium Santa Clara 68 500 5 group matches quarterfinals and men s bronze medal match California Memorial Stadium Berkeley 63 000 8 group matches Stanford Stadium Stanford 50 000 5 group matches quarterfinals and women s bronze medal match PayPal Park San Jose 20 000 8 group matches Snapdragon Stadiumclass notpageimage Location of potential football facilities in San Diego Potential venues in San Diego CountySnapdragon Stadium San Diego 35 000 8 group matchesThe Games EditSports Edit For the first time surfing was included in the IOC s list of 28 core sports for the Olympics after having been an optional sport at the previous two Games Under current IOC policies the program of the Summer Olympics consists of 28 core sports that persist between Games with other three to six slots able to be filled with backing of the IOC and organizing committee in order to improve local interest 45 46 provided that the total number of participants does not exceed 10 500 athletes 47 On December 9 2021 the IOC stated that boxing modern pentathlon and weightlifting had been removed from the initial program for the 2028 Summer Olympics and would only be included if their respective governing bodies resolve issues raised by the IOC by 2023 48 In particular the International Boxing Association AIBA has faced ongoing governance issues which resulted in boxing at the 2020 Summer Olympics being overseen by an external task force 49 the International Weightlifting Federation has faced issues with doping and governance resulting in weightlifting being considered provisional for the 2024 Summer Olympics 49 while the Union Internationale de Pentathlon Moderne UIPM must also finalize and seek approval for their proposed replacement of show jumping in the modern pentathlon 50 The UIPM tested obstacle course racing at an event in late June 2022 51 52 Additionally the IOC executive board has proposed that skateboarding sport climbing and surfing be promoted to the core program of the 2028 Summer Olympics the three sports successfully debuted as optional sports at the 2020 Summer Olympics and are expected to return in the same capacity in 2024 50 53 2028 Summer Olympic Sports ProgramAquatics Artistic swimming 2 Diving 8 Swimming 37 Water polo 2 Archery 5 Athletics 48 Badminton 5 Basketball Basketball 2 3x3 basketball 2 Canoeing Slalom 6 Sprint 10 Cycling BMX freestyle 2 BMX racing 2 Mountain biking 2 Road 4 Track 12 Equestrian Dressage 2 Eventing 2 Jumping 2 Fencing 12 Field hockey 2 Football 2 Golf 2 Gymnastics Artistic 14 Rhythmic 2 Trampoline 2 Handball 2 Judo 15 Rowing 14 Rugby sevens 2 Sailing 10 Shooting 15 Skateboarding 4 Sport climbing 4 Surfing 2 Table tennis 5 Taekwondo 8 Tennis 5 Triathlon 3 Volleyball Volleyball indoor 2 Beach volleyball 2 Wrestling Freestyle 12 Greco Roman 6 Optional sports Edit In August 2022 it was announced that nine sports had made the shortlist for inclusion in the Games with presentations expected to be made later that month 54 55 The sports are Cricket International Cricket Council Break dancing World DanceSport Federation Baseball softball World Baseball Softball Confederation Flag Football International Federation of American Football Karate World Karate Federation Kickboxing World Association of Kickboxing Organizations Lacrosse World Lacrosse Squash World Squash Federation Motorsport Federation Internationale de l Automobile There is no limit as to the number of sports the IOC can add but the organizing committee is not obligated to include these sports and the IOC has set an athlete quota at 10 500 athletes Each sport must also meet the following criteria list for the possibility of inclusion 56 Prioritizing a reduction in the cost and complexity of hosting the Games Engaging the best athletes and sports that put athlete health and safety first Recognizing global appeal to fans across the world and host country interest Prioritizing gender equality and youth relevance to engage new fans and athletes Upholding integrity and fairness to support clean sports Supporting environmental sustainability to foster long term sustainability A final decision is expected to be made at the 140th IOC Session in Mumbai in 2023 Ceremonies Edit In January 2017 it was reported that the bid committee had proposed holding the opening and closing ceremonies at both SoFi Stadium and the historic Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in an acknowledgement of its role in the 1932 and 1984 Olympics The plans called the final leg of the torch relay to be ceremonially launched from the Coliseum a simulcast of the opening ceremony proper at SoFi Stadium for those in attendance and the ceremonial re lighting of the historic Olympic cauldron at the stadium once the cauldron is lit in Inglewood The closing ceremony would be held in reverse with opening segments at SoFi Stadium and the official protocol held at the Coliseum The proposal is unprecedented and would mark the first time two major venues are featured in the opening and closing ceremonies The final plan is pending per IOC approval 57 Marketing EditEmblem Edit On September 1 2020 the LA organizing committee unveiled the emblem for the 2028 Summer Olympics featuring the characters LA and 28 in a stacked layout The A in LA is designed to be interchangeable with variations created in collaboration with athletes artists designers celebrities and other figures such as musician Billie Eilish Indian Canadian comedian Lilly Singh and actress Reese Witherspoon 58 59 There is also a variation derived from the Stars in Motion emblem of the 1984 Summer Olympics 60 Organizing committee chairman Casey Wasserman explained that the multitude of variations was intended to showcase our community s collective creativity and celebrate the diversity that makes us strong as the city defies a singular identity Chief marketing officer Amy Gleeson stated that the emblem was designed to foster a deeper connection with the audience who will be in their 20s and 30s when the games happen 58 59 61 62 60 Broadcasting rights EditIn the United States the Games will be broadcast by NBCUniversal as part of a long term contract with the IOC through 2032 63 The Universal Studios Lot is planned to be the site of the International Broadcast Centre for the Games 43 In addition NBCUniversal and the organizing committee will coordinate numerous sponsorship sales for the Games and parent company Comcast will be promoted as a founding partner of Los Angeles 2028 as part of a renewed sponsorship agreement with the United States Olympic amp Paralympic Committee USOPC 64 65 On January 16 2023 the IOC renewed its European pay television and streaming rights agreements with Warner Bros Discovery through 2032 covering 49 European territories The IOC concurrently reached a deal for free to air coverage with the European Broadcasting Union EBU whose member broadcasters will carry at least 200 hours of coverage of the 2028 Summer Olympics 66 Albania RTSH 67 Australia Nine Network 68 69 Austria ORF 70 Belgium RTBF VRT 71 72 Brazil Grupo Globo 73 Bulgaria BNT 74 Canada CBC Radio Canada 75 China CMG 76 Croatia HRT 77 Czech Republic CT 78 Denmark DR TV 2 79 Europe EBU Warner Bros Discovery 80 Estonia ERR 81 Finland Yle 82 France France Televisions 83 Germany ARD ZDF 84 Greece ERT 85 Hungary MTVA 86 Iceland RUV 87 Ireland RTE 88 Israel Sports Channel 89 Italy RAI 90 Japan Japan Consortium 91 Latvia LTV 92 Lithuania LRT 93 Montenegro RTCG 94 Netherlands NOS 95 Norway NRK 96 Poland TVP 97 Slovakia RTVS 98 Slovenia RTV 99 Spain RTVE 100 Sweden SVT 101 Switzerland SRG SSR 102 Korea JTBC 103 Ukraine Suspilne 104 United Kingdom BBC 105 United States NBCUniversal 63 See also Edit United States portal California portal Greater Los Angeles portal Olympic Games portal2028 Summer Paralympics Olympic Games celebrated in the United States 1904 Summer Olympics St Louis 1932 Summer Olympics Los Angeles 1932 Winter Olympics Lake Placid 1960 Winter Olympics Squaw Valley 1980 Winter Olympics Lake Placid 1984 Summer Olympics Los Angeles 1996 Summer Olympics Atlanta 2002 Winter Olympics Salt Lake City 2028 Summer Olympics Los AngelesList of IOC country codes Casey Wasserman head of the Organizing CommitteeReferences Edit LA28 Announces Official Dates for the LA28 Olympic and Paralympic Games LA 2028 Official Website July 18 2022 Retrieved July 19 2022 Tapp Tom July 18 2022 2028 L A Olympics Dates Announced For Los Angeles Hosted Games Deadline Hollywood Retrieved July 19 2022 Twenty eight sports included in youth focused LA28 Initial Sports Programme International Olympic Committee February 3 2022 Retrieved November 19 2022 Houston Michael October 4 2022 Shortlisted sports to present Olympic proposals to Los Angeles 2028 this week Inside The Games Retrieved November 19 2022 Candidature Process Olympic Games 2024 PDF Archived PDF from the original on December 22 2015 Retrieved March 1 2017 Butler Nick February 24 2017 Exclusive IOC vow to further adjust candidature process after Budapest 2024 withdrawal Inside the Games Archived from the original on August 1 2017 Retrieved August 1 2017 Meeting of the IOC Executive Board in Lausanne Information for the media Olympic org May 19 2017 Archived from the original on June 22 2017 Bach Says Paris and LA Mayors Are Optimistic About Agreement After Initial Discussions GamesBids com gamesbids com July 12 2017 Archived from the original on August 1 2017 Retrieved August 1 2017 Los Angeles Declares Candidature for Olympic Games 2028 IOC to Contribute USD 1 8Billion to the Local Organising Committee IOC Archived from the original on August 1 2017 Retrieved August 1 2017 L A City Council endorses 2028 Olympics bid accepting responsibility for any cost overruns Los Angeles Times August 2017 Archived from the original on February 28 2020 Retrieved August 11 2017 Los Angeles gets official go ahead to host 2028 Olympics Chicago Tribune September 2017 Archived from the original on July 15 2018 Retrieved September 11 2017 L A officially awarded 2028 Olympic Games Los Angeles Times September 2017 Archived from the original on May 7 2020 Retrieved September 13 2017 IOC makes historic decision by simultaneously awarding Olympic Games 2024 to Paris and 2028 to Los Angeles International Olympic Committee September 13 2017 Archived from the original on July 17 2019 Retrieved October 4 2019 Los Angeles 2028 releases privately funded balanced budget for Olympic and Paralympic Games www insidethegames biz April 30 2019 Archived from the original on October 15 2021 Retrieved January 5 2021 State taxpayers will back LA Olympics bid if it goes over budget Los Angeles Times October 2017 Archived from the original on October 18 2017 Retrieved October 17 2017 Olympic officials visit L A for the first time since awarding the bid and are impressed so far with what s to come Los Angeles Times August 2018 Archived from the original on August 29 2018 Retrieved August 29 2018 LA 2024 Olympic bid receives wide public support in new poll Los Angeles Times February 23 2016 Archived from the original on November 17 2021 Retrieved February 23 2016 See the Changes Coming to the Historic LA Memorial Coliseum NBCUniversal Media January 29 2018 Archived from the original on March 23 2018 Retrieved March 22 2018 Renovated Coliseum Press Box to be 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June 4 2019 Suspilne Movlennya otrimaye prava na translyaciyu chotiroh Olimpijskih igor z 2026 roku in Ukrainian Suspilne January 17 2023 Retrieved January 17 2023 The Olympic Games to remain on the BBC for the next decade BBC January 16 2023 Archived from the original on January 16 2023 Retrieved January 16 2023 External links Edit Los Angeles 2028 Olympics com International Olympic Committee LA 2028Candidature files Edit Stage 1 Vision Games Concept and Strategy Stage 2 Governance Legal and Venue Funding Budget released Dec 2nd 2016 Stage 3 Games Delivery Experience and Venue Legacy Sustainability VisionSummer OlympicsPreceded byParis XXXIV OlympiadLos Angeles2028 Succeeded byBrisbane Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2028 Summer Olympics amp oldid 1148528443, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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