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Bids for the 2014 Winter Olympics

Seven applicant cities presented bids to host the 2014 Winter Olympics and Paralympics (formally known as XXII Olympic Winter Games and XI Paralympic Winter Games) to the International Olympic Committee (IOC). The IOC Executive Board shortlisted three cities—Sochi, Russia; Salzburg, Austria; and Pyeongchang, South Korea—with Sochi winning the IOC's July 2007 final vote.

Bids for the
2014 (2014) Winter Olympics and Paralympics
Overview
XXII Olympic Winter Games
XI Paralympic Winter Games
Winner: Sochi
Runner-up: Pyeongchang
Shortlist: Salzburg
Details
CommitteeIOC
Election venueGuatemala City
119th IOC Session
Map
Missing location of the bidding cities.

Location of the bidding cities
Important dates
First Bid28 July 2005
Second bid1 February 2006
Shortlist22 June 2006
Decision4 July 2007
Decision
WinnerSochi (51 votes)
Runner-upPyeongchang (47 votes)

The three selected candidates, which were chosen on 22 June 2006, delivered to the IOC their Candidature Files (known as bid books) on 10 January 2007. From February to April 2007, an ad hoc committee performed visits to the candidate cities and prepared an evaluation report which was released one month before the election.

The election by exhaustive ballot took place on 4 July 2007 in Guatemala City during the 119th IOC Session;[1] Sochi beat out Pyeongchang by four votes in the second round of voting to win the rights to host after Salzburg had been eliminated in the first round. Pyeongchang could later awarded the 2018 Winter Olympics in 2011, just one year before the 2012 Summer Olympics.

Candidature procedure and timeline edit

Then Russian President Vladimir Putin addresses the IOC session on 4 July 2007 in Guatemala City on behalf of the 2014 Sochi bid.

Phase 1: Candidature acceptance procedure edit

Bidding cities had to be approved by their national Olympic committees, which have the right to choose between several cities in their respective countries. The cities had to submit their applications to the IOC by 28 July 2005. The cities were asked to complete a questionnaire, which they had to submit to the IOC by 1 February 2006. An IOC Working Group then studied their answers to help the executive board members select the cities, which became candidate cities and went through to the second phase of the process. The executive board of IOC accepted three bids on 22 June 2006.

Phase 2: Candidature procedure edit

The candidate cities were invited to submit their candidature file, which is a detailed description of their Olympic plans, and to prepare for a visit by the IOC Evaluation Commission. This commission undertook a technical analysis of each candidature and produced a report, which was to be published one month before the host-city election and sent to the IOC members for study. The candidature files were submitted on 10 January 2007. The IOC Evaluation Committee visited the candidate cities in February and March 2007, and published its report on 4 June.[citation needed]

During the 119th IOC Session on 4 July 2007 in Guatemala City, Salzburg received 25 votes and was relegated, Pyeongchang received 36 votes, and Sochi received 34 votes in the first round of the IOC voting procedure. In the second and final round, Pyeongchang received 47 votes but Sochi received 51 votes and was therefore chosen as the host of the 2014 Olympics.

Evaluation of the applicant cities edit

Each cell of the table provides a minimum and a maximum figure obtained by the applicant city on the specific criteria. These figures are to be compared to a benchmark which has been set at 6.

Table of scores given by the IOC Working Group to assess the quality and feasibility of the 2014 Applicant cities
Criteria Weight Sochi Salzburg Jaca Almaty Pyeongchang Sofia Borjomi
  RUS   AUT   ESP   KAZ   KOR   BUL   GEO
Min Max Min Max Min Max Min Max Min Max Min Max Min Max
Governmental support, legal issues, public opinion 2 6.6 7.5 6.6 7.2 7.3 8.1 4.7 5.9 7.9 8.5 5.1 6.4 4.5 5.6
General infrastructure 5 5.8 6.9 7.8 8.6 4.8 6.0 6.3 7.9 6.4 7.6 4.2 5.3 2.7 4.2
Sport venues 4 5.5 7.1 7.2 8.4 5.0 6.6 4.7 6.9 6.8 8.1 3.6 5.4 3.4 4.9
Olympic Village(s) 3 7.4 8.6 7.9 8.9 4.2 6.5 6.5 8.0 5.2 7.2 4.8 6.5 5.5 7.2
Environmental conditions and impact 2 4.9 6.6 7.8 8.7 5.2 6.6 4.9 6.6 6.4 8.0 2.5 4.5 2.0 4.5
Accommodation 5 7.3 8.3 9.6 9.6 4.3 4.8 4.9 5.9 9.6 9.6 3.9 4.1 3.0 4.1
Transport concept 3 5.9 7.7 7.1 8.6 2.6 4.3 7.6 8.8 6.6 8.0 2.6 4.3 2.2 4.3
Safety and security 3 6.0 6.7 7.6 8.2 6.8 7.3 6.0 6.5 7.4 8.1 4.3 5.3 3.4 4.7
Experience from past sport events 3 5.2 7.2 8.6 9.6 6.8 8.4 3.8 5.4 8.0 9.0 5.4 7.0 2.0 4.0
Finance 3 6.0 6.8 7.0 8.0 6.5 8.0 5.6 6.8 6.2 7.6 4.6 5.8 2.8 3.5
Overall project and legacy 3 5.0 7.0 8.0 9.0 3.0 5.0 4.0 7.0 7.0 8.0 3.0 5.0 2.0 4.0

    Candidate cities overview edit

     
    Sochi residents celebrate IOC's decision to hold 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi

    All three cities suggested hosting the Games between February 7–23, 2014. The Paralympics were held from March 7–16.

    Pyeongchang edit

    Pyeongchang
    Overview
    Details
    Round 1 36
    Round 2 47
    Country   South Korea

    Pyeongchang was unanimously selected over Muju by the Korean Olympic Committee in December 2004, and was the first city to submit its bid to the International Olympic Committee. The bid launched a full-scale campaign after losing the 2010 race by a mere three votes to Vancouver. The 2014 project concentrated all venues within one hour of Pyeongchang, and called for huge sums of investment into new infrastructure and sporting venues, including the new Alpensia Resort. The sporting event was touted as promoting a message of peace and harmony in the divided country.

    Since 2003, the region had been selected to host the 2009 Snowboard World Championships, the 2009 Biathlon World Championships and the 2009 World Women's Curling Championship, and aimed to become the winter sports hub of Asia. Although an IOC evaluation team complimented the area on levels of public support, government support and infrastructure in February 2007,[2] the bid was also criticized because Pyeongchang was not a popular tourist destination, the venue relied heavily on artificial snow due to a dry winter climate, most slopes were relatively short and local amenities were poorly developed.[citation needed] Pyeongchang was eventually chosen to host the 2018 Winter Olympics and the 2024 Winter Youth Olympics.

    Salzburg edit

    Salzburg
    Overview
    Details
    Votes 25
    Country   Austria

    The Austrian city was eliminated in the first round in voting during the 2010 competition. The 2014 bid was more compact than the 2010 project due to the elimination of the Kitzbühel, St. Johann and Ramsau venues. The venue for bobsled, skeleton and luge, Schönau am Königssee, was located in Germany.

    Sochi edit

    Sochi
    Overview
    Details
    Round 1 34
    Round 2 51
    Country   Russia

    The Russian Black Sea resort bid for the Winter Olympics for the second time after failing to make the shortlist in 2002. The primary venue for outdoor sports was the ski resort in Krasnaya Polyana, which was designed by the same company that worked on ski slopes for the 2010 Winter Olympics, and scheduled to open in 2007. Sochi would host the indoor winter sports. The high number of hotel rooms and strong public and political support from the city were expected to strengthen the bid's chances.

    Note: the cities are listed in the presentation order determined by draw during the IOC Executive Board meeting of 26 October 2005.

    Applicant cities overview edit

    The following applicant cities were approved by their National Olympic Committees[3] and submitted their applications to the IOC but were not selected as candidates by the executive board. They all sent their respective questionnaire answers by 1 February 2006. These documents were made public in the following days.

    2014 non-selected applicant cities
    Logo Name Country (IOC Country Code)
    Jaca Spain (ESP)
    Jaca has failed four times in bidding for the Winter Olympics—for the 1998, 2002, 2010, and 2014 Olympics. It has previously hosted the 1981 and 1995 Winter Universiades, and hosted the European Youth Olympic Festival in February 2007. Skiing events were proposed to take place at ski resorts of the Pyrenees: Candanchú, Formigal, Astún and Panticosa. Most of the ice events, as well as the Opening and Closing Ceremonies (at La Romareda Stadium), were to take place 142 km (88 mi) south of Jaca in Zaragoza. Preliminary ice hockey competitions were to take place in Jaca and Huesca. Jaca bid for 2002 but missed the short list, which was limited to Östersund (Sweden), Quebec City (Canada), Sion (Switzerland) and Salt Lake City (US), the eventual host.

    Jaca did not make the short list because the Opening and Closing Ceremonies were not scheduled to take place in Jaca, which is in contradiction with article 34.1 of the Olympic Charter.

    Almaty Kazakhstan (KAZ)
    Almaty, Kazakhstan's largest city, submitted its official bid for the 2014 Olympics to the International Olympic Committee. The city had already planned to host the 2011 Winter Asian Games. The National Olympic Committee of the Republic of Kazakhstan cited the city would have used existing indoor sports facilities and the Chimbulak Mountain ski slopes. The bid was quite compact; all of the ice events were to be held in downtown Almaty and the alpine events in nearby Kumbel. The farthest events would have been in the Soldatskoe Valley venue, 45 km (28 miles) away from the center of Almaty and the Olympic Village. The historic Medew ice rink would have been the speed skating venue and would have been covered for the Games. Based on the scores released by the executive committee report, Almaty was placed fourth overall and would have been eligible for the shortlist because it had cleared the benchmark for some categories. However, IOC president Jacques Rogge said in the process of shortlisting to determine an Olympic Host City, what matters is "not quantity, but the quality" of the overall bids.[citation needed] Although Almaty presented a good bid, it was implied it was not at the same standard as the three that were selected to enter the shortlist. After the 2014 setback, Kazakhstan attempts to bid the 2018 Olympics and 2022 Olympics, but was beaten by Pyeongchang, South Korea and Beijing, China in 2011 and 2015.
    Sofia Bulgaria (BUL)
    Sofia submitted its application in the city's third attempt to land the Winter Games after losing the 1992 and 1994 nominations to Albertville and Lillehammer, respectively. The proposed Olympics was based on three main centers; Sofia, Borovets and Bansko. Sofia would have hosted the ice events, bobsleigh and luge events in nearby Vitosha natural park. The ambitious, multi-million-euro Super Borovets 70 kilometres (43 mi) away expansion project would have hosted cross-country skiing, freestyle skiing and snowboarding events. Near Sofia is the fast-developing resort Bansko 159 km (99 mi). Bansko, the site of the 2007 European biathlon championship, would have hosted the biathlon and alpine skiing events. The city's bid also gained significant political support within the country and sent in its application early on 17 April 2004. Sofia missed the 2014 shortlist on 22 June 2006. According to experts, the main reason for the 2014 elimination was the lack of detailed information provided in the reply to the IOC's questionnaire.
    Borjomi Georgia (GEO)
    Despite the lack of sports infrastructure, Georgia reportedly had the money and the will to host the Winter Olympics. The Games were proposed to be held in two locations: Borjomi and Tbilisi, which are about 200 km (120 miles) apart.

    Borjomi was the proposed venue for the outdoor sports disciplines (Alpine Skiing, Biathlon, Bobsleigh, Cross Country Skiing, Freestyle Skiing, Luge, Nordic Combined, Skeleton, Ski Jumping and Snowboard), while Tbilisi was expected to host the indoor sports disciplines (Curling, Figure Skating, Ice-Hockey, Short Track Speed Skating and Speed Skating). The Opening and Closing Ceremonies were expected to take place in the natural amphitheatre in the center of Bakuriani, a suburb of Borjomi. Bakuriani would also have been the venue for the cross-country and freestyle skiing.

    Note: the cities are listed in the presentation order determined by draw during the IOC Executive Board meeting of 26 October 2005.

    Applicant cities comparison edit

    2014 applicant cities
    Category Details Sochi
    Russia
    Salzburg
    Austria
    Jaca
    Spain
    Almaty
    Kazakhstan
    Pyeongchang
    Korea
    Sofia
    Bulgaria
    Borjomi
    Georgia
    Population City (2005) 333,267 149,997 12,322 1,185,696 45,482 1,090,295 13,725
    Country (2005) 143,420,309 8,184,691 40,341,462 15,185,844 48,294,134 7,450,349 4,677,401
    Public opinion, support City 84% 60% 91% 83% 97% 81%
    Country 53% 72% 85% 92% 74% 86%
    Bid budget (million US$) Phase I 10.0 2.7 1.3 4.0 5.0 0.5 2.2
    Phase II 17.5 5.1 10.7 16.0 16.0 12.5 5.0
    Main airport,
    2005/2014
    Name Sochi International Salzburg Airport Zaragoza Airport Almaty International Incheon International Sofia International Tbilisi International
    Distance (km) 6 5 156 22 241 10 203
    Runways 2/2 1 2 1/2 2/3 1 2/2
    Terminals 1/2 2 1/2 1/2
    Gates 8/27 18 3 44/74 7 2/6
    Cap./year 215,213 1,650,000/3,000,000 2,000,000/4,000,000
    Cap./day 40,000 24,000/48,000
    Cap./hour 1,200/2,500 12,000/17,253 /2,000
    Longest distance* km 86 83 180 61 124 156 199
    min 94 65 150 93 76 135 196

    *Airports not included

    Note: the cities are listed in the presentation order defined by the IOC during its Executive Board of 26 October 2005.

    Applicant cities venues list edit

    These venues are from the applicant cities' mini bid books. Note that the selected candidate cities, and in particular Sochi, changed their venues plan afterwards in the final proposal to the IOC.

    2014 applicant cities
    Event Sochi Salzburg Jaca Almaty Pyeongchang Sofia Borjomi
    Dates 7 February
    23 February
    7 February
    23 February
    31 January
    16 February
    7 February
    23 February
    7 February
    23 February
    10 February
    26 February
    7 February
    23 February
    Opening and closing ceremonies Fisht Olympic Stadium Wals Siezenheim Stadium La Romareda, Zaragoza Almaty Central Stadium Alpensia Vasil Levski National Stadium Ceremony Plaza (Bakuriani)
    Alpine skiing
    speed M
    Roza Khutor Alpine Resort Flachauwinkl Formigal Kumbel Jungbong Alpine Skiing Area Shiligarnik (Bansko) Borjomi Didveli
    Sakvelo Track
    Alpine skiing
    speed W
    Roza Khutor Alpine Resort Altenmarkt / Zauchensee Formigal Kumbel Jungbong Alpine Skiing Area Shiligarnik (Bansko) Borjomi Didveli
    Sakvelo Track
    Alpine skiing
    technical M
    Roza Khutor Alpine Resort Flachau Candanchú Kumbel Yongpyong Resort Banderishka Poliana (Bansko) Borjomi Didveli
    Alpine skiing
    technical W
    Roza Khutor Alpine Resort Flachau Candanchú Kumbel Yongpyong Resort Banderishka Poliana (Bansko) Borjomi Didveli
    Cross country skiing Psekhako Ridge Radstadt / Altenmarkt Candanchú Soldatskoe Valley Alpensia Borovetz Bakuriani Iagora Valley
    Nordic combined C-C Psekhako Ridge Bischofshofen Candanchú Gorny Gigant Alpensia Borovetz Borjomi Kokhtadziri
    Freestyle skiing Laura River Valley Resort Flachauwinkl Astún Kumbel Bokwang Phoenix Cherveno Zname (Borovetz) Bakuriani Kokhta 2 Tatra Pom
    Biathlon Psekhako Ridge Radstadt / Altenmarkt Candanchú Soldatskoe Valley Alpensia Banderishka Poliana (Bansko) Borjomi Iagora Valley
    Ski jumping Esto Sadok Bischofshofen Canfranc-Estación Jumping Centre Gorny Gigant Alpensia Borovetz Borjomi Kokhtadziri
    Snowboard Alpika Service Altenmarkt / Zauchensee
    Flachau
    Panticosa Chimbulak Sungwoo Resort Cherveno Zname (Borovetz) Bakuriani Kokhta 2 Tatra Pom
    Hockey Sochi Arena
    Kudepsta Entertainment Centre
    Salzburg Volksgarten
    Salzburg Wals
    Jaca Ice Pavilion
    Huesca Sports Palace
    Zaragoza Ice Pavilion
    Almaty Olympic Ice Park Wonju Sports Complex
    Wonju Halla University
    National Winter Sports Palace (Sofia)
    West Park Sports Center (Sofia)
    Tbilisi Makhata Hill Arenas
    Speed skating Adler Commercial Centre Salzburg Liefering Oval Jaca High Performance Winter Sports Centre Medeo Gangneung East Park National Olympic Center (Sofia) Tbilisi Central Stadium
    Figure skating Imeretinskaya Exhibition Centre Salzburg Liefering Príncipe Felipe Pavilion, Zaragoza Almaty Olympic Ice Park Gangneung East Park National Olympic Center (Sofia) Tbilisi Sport Palace
    Short track Imeretinskaya Exhibition Centre Salzburg Liefering Príncipe Felipe Pavilion, Zaragoza Almaty Olympic Ice Park Gangneung East Park National Olympic Center (Sofia) Tbilisi Sport Palace
    Curling Imeretinskaya Exhibition Centre Salzburg Arena Zaragoza Sports Palace Balluan Sholak Gangneung Sofia Tbilisi Makhata Hill
    Bobsleigh/luge/skeleton National Sliding Centre Schönau am Königsee (Germany) Panticosa Sliding Centre Almatau Sungwoo Resort Boiana Center Borjomi Tskhratskaro

    Potential bids edit

    The following cities expressed interest in bidding but withdrew their 2014 Winter Olympics bids or decided not to bid.

    Votes results of the 2014 Winter Olympics and Winter Paralympics edit

    Four years earlier, Pyeongchang led the first ballot but was defeated in the second one, then losing to Vancouver, British Columbia. Both votes although four years apart bore a remarkable similarity.

    There were two rounds of voting at the session that decided which city would host the games. In the first round, Pyeongchang received 36 votes while Sochi received 34 votes. Salzburg was eliminated with only 25 votes. In the second round of voting, Pyeongchang garnered 47 votes but Sochi received most of the votes originally cast for Salzburg and gained 51 votes, winning the bid for the 2014 Winter Olympics.

    2014 Winter Olympics bidding results
    candidate City NOC Round 1 Round 2
    Sochi Russia 34 51
    Pyeongchang South Korea 36 47
    Salzburg Austria 25

    See also edit

    References edit

    1. ^ "2014 Winter Olympic Games bids". GamesBids. from the original on 23 March 2007. Retrieved 2 April 2007.
    2. ^ http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/02/17/sports/AS-SPT-OLY-SKorea-Winter-Bid.php [dead link]
    3. ^ "IOC News – Olympic Updates, Articles and Press Releases". 15 September 2021.

    External links edit

    Candidature files edit

    Mini bid books edit

    • Sochi 2014
    • Salzburg 2014
    • Jaca 2014
    • Almaty 2014
    • PyeongChang 2014
    • Sofia 2014
    • Borjomi 2014

    IOC evaluation report of the applicant cities edit

    • Conclusions
    • Full evaluation report

    bids, 2014, winter, olympics, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jsto. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Bids for the 2014 Winter Olympics news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Seven applicant cities presented bids to host the 2014 Winter Olympics and Paralympics formally known as XXII Olympic Winter Games and XI Paralympic Winter Games to the International Olympic Committee IOC The IOC Executive Board shortlisted three cities Sochi Russia Salzburg Austria and Pyeongchang South Korea with Sochi winning the IOC s July 2007 final vote Bids for the 2014 2014 Winter Olympics and ParalympicsOverviewXXII Olympic Winter Games XI Paralympic Winter GamesWinner Sochi Runner up Pyeongchang Shortlist SalzburgDetailsCommitteeIOCElection venueGuatemala City119th IOC SessionMapMissing location of the bidding cities Location of the bidding citiesImportant datesFirst Bid28 July 2005Second bid1 February 2006Shortlist22 June 2006Decision4 July 2007DecisionWinnerSochi 51 votes Runner upPyeongchang 47 votes The three selected candidates which were chosen on 22 June 2006 delivered to the IOC their Candidature Files known as bid books on 10 January 2007 From February to April 2007 an ad hoc committee performed visits to the candidate cities and prepared an evaluation report which was released one month before the election The election by exhaustive ballot took place on 4 July 2007 in Guatemala City during the 119th IOC Session 1 Sochi beat out Pyeongchang by four votes in the second round of voting to win the rights to host after Salzburg had been eliminated in the first round Pyeongchang could later awarded the 2018 Winter Olympics in 2011 just one year before the 2012 Summer Olympics Contents 1 Candidature procedure and timeline 1 1 Phase 1 Candidature acceptance procedure 1 2 Phase 2 Candidature procedure 2 Evaluation of the applicant cities 3 Candidate cities overview 3 1 Pyeongchang 3 2 Salzburg 3 3 Sochi 4 Applicant cities overview 5 Applicant cities comparison 6 Applicant cities venues list 7 Potential bids 8 Votes results of the 2014 Winter Olympics and Winter Paralympics 9 See also 10 References 11 External links 11 1 Candidature files 11 2 Mini bid books 11 3 IOC evaluation report of the applicant citiesCandidature procedure and timeline edit source source source source track track track Then Russian President Vladimir Putin addresses the IOC session on 4 July 2007 in Guatemala City on behalf of the 2014 Sochi bid Phase 1 Candidature acceptance procedure edit Bidding cities had to be approved by their national Olympic committees which have the right to choose between several cities in their respective countries The cities had to submit their applications to the IOC by 28 July 2005 The cities were asked to complete a questionnaire which they had to submit to the IOC by 1 February 2006 An IOC Working Group then studied their answers to help the executive board members select the cities which became candidate cities and went through to the second phase of the process The executive board of IOC accepted three bids on 22 June 2006 Phase 2 Candidature procedure edit The candidate cities were invited to submit their candidature file which is a detailed description of their Olympic plans and to prepare for a visit by the IOC Evaluation Commission This commission undertook a technical analysis of each candidature and produced a report which was to be published one month before the host city election and sent to the IOC members for study The candidature files were submitted on 10 January 2007 The IOC Evaluation Committee visited the candidate cities in February and March 2007 and published its report on 4 June citation needed During the 119th IOC Session on 4 July 2007 in Guatemala City Salzburg received 25 votes and was relegated Pyeongchang received 36 votes and Sochi received 34 votes in the first round of the IOC voting procedure In the second and final round Pyeongchang received 47 votes but Sochi received 51 votes and was therefore chosen as the host of the 2014 Olympics Evaluation of the applicant cities editEach cell of the table provides a minimum and a maximum figure obtained by the applicant city on the specific criteria These figures are to be compared to a benchmark which has been set at 6 Table of scores given by the IOC Working Group to assess the quality and feasibility of the 2014 Applicant cities Criteria Weight Sochi Salzburg Jaca Almaty Pyeongchang Sofia Borjomi nbsp RUS nbsp AUT nbsp ESP nbsp KAZ nbsp KOR nbsp BUL nbsp GEOMin Max Min Max Min Max Min Max Min Max Min Max Min MaxGovernmental support legal issues public opinion 2 6 6 7 5 6 6 7 2 7 3 8 1 4 7 5 9 7 9 8 5 5 1 6 4 4 5 5 6General infrastructure 5 5 8 6 9 7 8 8 6 4 8 6 0 6 3 7 9 6 4 7 6 4 2 5 3 2 7 4 2Sport venues 4 5 5 7 1 7 2 8 4 5 0 6 6 4 7 6 9 6 8 8 1 3 6 5 4 3 4 4 9Olympic Village s 3 7 4 8 6 7 9 8 9 4 2 6 5 6 5 8 0 5 2 7 2 4 8 6 5 5 5 7 2Environmental conditions and impact 2 4 9 6 6 7 8 8 7 5 2 6 6 4 9 6 6 6 4 8 0 2 5 4 5 2 0 4 5Accommodation 5 7 3 8 3 9 6 9 6 4 3 4 8 4 9 5 9 9 6 9 6 3 9 4 1 3 0 4 1Transport concept 3 5 9 7 7 7 1 8 6 2 6 4 3 7 6 8 8 6 6 8 0 2 6 4 3 2 2 4 3Safety and security 3 6 0 6 7 7 6 8 2 6 8 7 3 6 0 6 5 7 4 8 1 4 3 5 3 3 4 4 7Experience from past sport events 3 5 2 7 2 8 6 9 6 6 8 8 4 3 8 5 4 8 0 9 0 5 4 7 0 2 0 4 0Finance 3 6 0 6 8 7 0 8 0 6 5 8 0 5 6 6 8 6 2 7 6 4 6 5 8 2 8 3 5Overall project and legacy 3 5 0 7 0 8 0 9 0 3 0 5 0 4 0 7 0 7 0 8 0 3 0 5 0 2 0 4 0Report by the IOC candidature acceptance working group to the IOC Executive BoardCandidate cities overview edit nbsp Sochi residents celebrate IOC s decision to hold 2014 Winter Olympics in SochiAll three cities suggested hosting the Games between February 7 23 2014 The Paralympics were held from March 7 16 Pyeongchang edit PyeongchangOverviewDetailsRound 1 36Round 2 47Country nbsp South KoreaMain article Pyeongchang bid for the 2014 Winter Olympics Pyeongchang was unanimously selected over Muju by the Korean Olympic Committee in December 2004 and was the first city to submit its bid to the International Olympic Committee The bid launched a full scale campaign after losing the 2010 race by a mere three votes to Vancouver The 2014 project concentrated all venues within one hour of Pyeongchang and called for huge sums of investment into new infrastructure and sporting venues including the new Alpensia Resort The sporting event was touted as promoting a message of peace and harmony in the divided country Since 2003 the region had been selected to host the 2009 Snowboard World Championships the 2009 Biathlon World Championships and the 2009 World Women s Curling Championship and aimed to become the winter sports hub of Asia Although an IOC evaluation team complimented the area on levels of public support government support and infrastructure in February 2007 2 the bid was also criticized because Pyeongchang was not a popular tourist destination the venue relied heavily on artificial snow due to a dry winter climate most slopes were relatively short and local amenities were poorly developed citation needed Pyeongchang was eventually chosen to host the 2018 Winter Olympics and the 2024 Winter Youth Olympics Salzburg edit SalzburgOverviewDetailsVotes 25Country nbsp AustriaMain article Salzburg bid for the 2014 Winter Olympics The Austrian city was eliminated in the first round in voting during the 2010 competition The 2014 bid was more compact than the 2010 project due to the elimination of the Kitzbuhel St Johann and Ramsau venues The venue for bobsled skeleton and luge Schonau am Konigssee was located in Germany Sochi edit SochiOverviewDetailsRound 1 34Round 2 51Country nbsp RussiaMain article Sochi bid for the 2014 Winter Olympics The Russian Black Sea resort bid for the Winter Olympics for the second time after failing to make the shortlist in 2002 The primary venue for outdoor sports was the ski resort in Krasnaya Polyana which was designed by the same company that worked on ski slopes for the 2010 Winter Olympics and scheduled to open in 2007 Sochi would host the indoor winter sports The high number of hotel rooms and strong public and political support from the city were expected to strengthen the bid s chances Note the cities are listed in the presentation order determined by draw during the IOC Executive Board meeting of 26 October 2005 Applicant cities overview editThe following applicant cities were approved by their National Olympic Committees 3 and submitted their applications to the IOC but were not selected as candidates by the executive board They all sent their respective questionnaire answers by 1 February 2006 These documents were made public in the following days 2014 non selected applicant cities Logo Name Country IOC Country Code Jaca Spain ESP Jaca has failed four times in bidding for the Winter Olympics for the 1998 2002 2010 and 2014 Olympics It has previously hosted the 1981 and 1995 Winter Universiades and hosted the European Youth Olympic Festival in February 2007 Skiing events were proposed to take place at ski resorts of the Pyrenees Candanchu Formigal Astun and Panticosa Most of the ice events as well as the Opening and Closing Ceremonies at La Romareda Stadium were to take place 142 km 88 mi south of Jaca in Zaragoza Preliminary ice hockey competitions were to take place in Jaca and Huesca Jaca bid for 2002 but missed the short list which was limited to Ostersund Sweden Quebec City Canada Sion Switzerland and Salt Lake City US the eventual host Jaca did not make the short list because the Opening and Closing Ceremonies were not scheduled to take place in Jaca which is in contradiction with article 34 1 of the Olympic Charter Almaty Kazakhstan KAZ Main article Almaty bid for the 2014 Winter Olympics Almaty Kazakhstan s largest city submitted its official bid for the 2014 Olympics to the International Olympic Committee The city had already planned to host the 2011 Winter Asian Games The National Olympic Committee of the Republic of Kazakhstan cited the city would have used existing indoor sports facilities and the Chimbulak Mountain ski slopes The bid was quite compact all of the ice events were to be held in downtown Almaty and the alpine events in nearby Kumbel The farthest events would have been in the Soldatskoe Valley venue 45 km 28 miles away from the center of Almaty and the Olympic Village The historic Medew ice rink would have been the speed skating venue and would have been covered for the Games Based on the scores released by the executive committee report Almaty was placed fourth overall and would have been eligible for the shortlist because it had cleared the benchmark for some categories However IOC president Jacques Rogge said in the process of shortlisting to determine an Olympic Host City what matters is not quantity but the quality of the overall bids citation needed Although Almaty presented a good bid it was implied it was not at the same standard as the three that were selected to enter the shortlist After the 2014 setback Kazakhstan attempts to bid the 2018 Olympics and 2022 Olympics but was beaten by Pyeongchang South Korea and Beijing China in 2011 and 2015 Sofia Bulgaria BUL Sofia submitted its application in the city s third attempt to land the Winter Games after losing the 1992 and 1994 nominations to Albertville and Lillehammer respectively The proposed Olympics was based on three main centers Sofia Borovets and Bansko Sofia would have hosted the ice events bobsleigh and luge events in nearby Vitosha natural park The ambitious multi million euro Super Borovets 70 kilometres 43 mi away expansion project would have hosted cross country skiing freestyle skiing and snowboarding events Near Sofia is the fast developing resort Bansko 159 km 99 mi Bansko the site of the 2007 European biathlon championship would have hosted the biathlon and alpine skiing events The city s bid also gained significant political support within the country and sent in its application early on 17 April 2004 Sofia missed the 2014 shortlist on 22 June 2006 According to experts the main reason for the 2014 elimination was the lack of detailed information provided in the reply to the IOC s questionnaire Borjomi Georgia GEO Despite the lack of sports infrastructure Georgia reportedly had the money and the will to host the Winter Olympics The Games were proposed to be held in two locations Borjomi and Tbilisi which are about 200 km 120 miles apart Borjomi was the proposed venue for the outdoor sports disciplines Alpine Skiing Biathlon Bobsleigh Cross Country Skiing Freestyle Skiing Luge Nordic Combined Skeleton Ski Jumping and Snowboard while Tbilisi was expected to host the indoor sports disciplines Curling Figure Skating Ice Hockey Short Track Speed Skating and Speed Skating The Opening and Closing Ceremonies were expected to take place in the natural amphitheatre in the center of Bakuriani a suburb of Borjomi Bakuriani would also have been the venue for the cross country and freestyle skiing Note the cities are listed in the presentation order determined by draw during the IOC Executive Board meeting of 26 October 2005 Applicant cities comparison edit2014 applicant cities Category Details SochiRussia SalzburgAustria JacaSpain AlmatyKazakhstan PyeongchangKorea SofiaBulgaria BorjomiGeorgiaPopulation City 2005 333 267 149 997 12 322 1 185 696 45 482 1 090 295 13 725Country 2005 143 420 309 8 184 691 40 341 462 15 185 844 48 294 134 7 450 349 4 677 401Public opinion support City 84 60 91 83 97 81 Country 53 72 85 92 74 86 Bid budget million US Phase I 10 0 2 7 1 3 4 0 5 0 0 5 2 2Phase II 17 5 5 1 10 7 16 0 16 0 12 5 5 0Main airport 2005 2014 Name Sochi International Salzburg Airport Zaragoza Airport Almaty International Incheon International Sofia International Tbilisi InternationalDistance km 6 5 156 22 241 10 203Runways 2 2 1 2 1 2 2 3 1 2 2Terminals 1 2 2 1 2 1 2Gates 8 27 18 3 44 74 7 2 6Cap year 215 213 1 650 000 3 000 000 2 000 000 4 000 000Cap day 40 000 24 000 48 000Cap hour 1 200 2 500 12 000 17 253 2 000Longest distance km 86 83 180 61 124 156 199min 94 65 150 93 76 135 196 Airports not includedNote the cities are listed in the presentation order defined by the IOC during its Executive Board of 26 October 2005 Applicant cities venues list editThese venues are from the applicant cities mini bid books Note that the selected candidate cities and in particular Sochi changed their venues plan afterwards in the final proposal to the IOC 2014 applicant cities Event Sochi Salzburg Jaca Almaty Pyeongchang Sofia BorjomiDates 7 February23 February 7 February23 February 31 January16 February 7 February23 February 7 February 23 February 10 February26 February 7 February23 FebruaryOpening and closing ceremonies Fisht Olympic Stadium Wals Siezenheim Stadium La Romareda Zaragoza Almaty Central Stadium Alpensia Vasil Levski National Stadium Ceremony Plaza Bakuriani Alpine skiingspeed M Roza Khutor Alpine Resort Flachauwinkl Formigal Kumbel Jungbong Alpine Skiing Area Shiligarnik Bansko Borjomi DidveliSakvelo TrackAlpine skiingspeed W Roza Khutor Alpine Resort Altenmarkt Zauchensee Formigal Kumbel Jungbong Alpine Skiing Area Shiligarnik Bansko Borjomi DidveliSakvelo TrackAlpine skiingtechnical M Roza Khutor Alpine Resort Flachau Candanchu Kumbel Yongpyong Resort Banderishka Poliana Bansko Borjomi DidveliAlpine skiingtechnical W Roza Khutor Alpine Resort Flachau Candanchu Kumbel Yongpyong Resort Banderishka Poliana Bansko Borjomi DidveliCross country skiing Psekhako Ridge Radstadt Altenmarkt Candanchu Soldatskoe Valley Alpensia Borovetz Bakuriani Iagora ValleyNordic combined C C Psekhako Ridge Bischofshofen Candanchu Gorny Gigant Alpensia Borovetz Borjomi KokhtadziriFreestyle skiing Laura River Valley Resort Flachauwinkl Astun Kumbel Bokwang Phoenix Cherveno Zname Borovetz Bakuriani Kokhta 2 Tatra PomBiathlon Psekhako Ridge Radstadt Altenmarkt Candanchu Soldatskoe Valley Alpensia Banderishka Poliana Bansko Borjomi Iagora ValleySki jumping Esto Sadok Bischofshofen Canfranc Estacion Jumping Centre Gorny Gigant Alpensia Borovetz Borjomi KokhtadziriSnowboard Alpika Service Altenmarkt ZauchenseeFlachau Panticosa Chimbulak Sungwoo Resort Cherveno Zname Borovetz Bakuriani Kokhta 2 Tatra PomHockey Sochi ArenaKudepsta Entertainment Centre Salzburg VolksgartenSalzburg Wals Jaca Ice PavilionHuesca Sports Palace Zaragoza Ice Pavilion Almaty Olympic Ice Park Wonju Sports ComplexWonju Halla University National Winter Sports Palace Sofia West Park Sports Center Sofia Tbilisi Makhata Hill ArenasSpeed skating Adler Commercial Centre Salzburg Liefering Oval Jaca High Performance Winter Sports Centre Medeo Gangneung East Park National Olympic Center Sofia Tbilisi Central StadiumFigure skating Imeretinskaya Exhibition Centre Salzburg Liefering Principe Felipe Pavilion Zaragoza Almaty Olympic Ice Park Gangneung East Park National Olympic Center Sofia Tbilisi Sport PalaceShort track Imeretinskaya Exhibition Centre Salzburg Liefering Principe Felipe Pavilion Zaragoza Almaty Olympic Ice Park Gangneung East Park National Olympic Center Sofia Tbilisi Sport PalaceCurling Imeretinskaya Exhibition Centre Salzburg Arena Zaragoza Sports Palace Balluan Sholak Gangneung Sofia Tbilisi Makhata HillBobsleigh luge skeleton National Sliding Centre Schonau am Konigsee Germany Panticosa Sliding Centre Almatau Sungwoo Resort Boiana Center Borjomi TskhratskaroPotential bids editThe following cities expressed interest in bidding but withdrew their 2014 Winter Olympics bids or decided not to bid nbsp Andorra la Vella Andorra No backing by the Andorran Olympic Committee for 2014 bid nbsp Annecy France No backing by the French Olympic Committee after Paris lost its 2012 bid nbsp Erzurum Turkey The National Olympic Committee of Turkey cited a lack of infrastructure Erzurum had organized the 2011 Winter Universiade nbsp Harbin China Investment has been poured into the 2009 Winter Universiade nbsp Munich Germany National Olympic Committee for Germany cited lack of detail and planning nbsp Ostersund Sweden Lack of Swedish political support nbsp Quebec City Quebec Canada Discussed making a bid for these games before Vancouver was chosen to hold the 2010 Olympic Winter Games nbsp Reno and Lake Tahoe Nevada United States of America No backing by the United States Olympic Committee nbsp Tromso Norway The Norwegian government did not guarantee money to the bid nbsp Zurich Switzerland Withdrew their bid on 14 September 2004Votes results of the 2014 Winter Olympics and Winter Paralympics editFour years earlier Pyeongchang led the first ballot but was defeated in the second one then losing to Vancouver British Columbia Both votes although four years apart bore a remarkable similarity There were two rounds of voting at the session that decided which city would host the games In the first round Pyeongchang received 36 votes while Sochi received 34 votes Salzburg was eliminated with only 25 votes In the second round of voting Pyeongchang garnered 47 votes but Sochi received most of the votes originally cast for Salzburg and gained 51 votes winning the bid for the 2014 Winter Olympics 2014 Winter Olympics bidding resultscandidate City NOC Round 1 Round 2Sochi Russia 34 51Pyeongchang South Korea 36 47Salzburg Austria 25 See also edit2010 Winter Olympics bidsReferences edit 2014 Winter Olympic Games bids GamesBids Archived from the original on 23 March 2007 Retrieved 2 April 2007 http www iht com articles ap 2007 02 17 sports AS SPT OLY SKorea Winter Bid php dead link IOC News Olympic Updates Articles and Press Releases 15 September 2021 External links editCandidature acceptance procedure for the XXII Olympic Winter Games 2014 Homepage of the Sochi bid at the Wayback Machine archived 2 June 2008 Homepage of the Salzburg bid at the Wayback Machine archived 30 September 2007 Homepage of the PyeongChang bid at the Wayback Machine archived 12 October 2007 Homepage of the Jaca bid at the Wayback Machine archived 16 June 2006 Homepage of the Almaty bid at archive today archived 22 February 2006 Homepage of the Sofia bid at the Wayback Machine archived 19 August 2006 Homepage of the Borjomi bid IOC press release about the bid process 26 October 2005 Candidature files edit Sochi 2014 Salzburg 2014 PyeongChang 2014Mini bid books edit Sochi 2014 Salzburg 2014 Jaca 2014 Almaty 2014 PyeongChang 2014 Sofia 2014 Borjomi 2014IOC evaluation report of the applicant cities edit Conclusions Full evaluation report Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bids for the 2014 Winter Olympics amp oldid 1204084771, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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