Venues of the 2022 Winter Olympics and Paralympics

From Wikipedia - Reading time: 7 min

The Beijing Olympic Games Bidding Committee unveiled the venue layout plan for the 2022 Winter Olympics on 20 February 2014; the plan was include the five ice events at the Olympic Green, the Capital Indoor Stadium and the Wukesong Sports Center, which were some of the main venues of the 2008 Summer Olympics. Competitions for luge, bobsleigh and alpine skiing were held at the Xiaohaituo Mountain Area, in a northwest of Beijing (in the West Dazhuangke village,[note 1] of Zhangshanying in Yanqing District), 90 kilometres (56 miles) away from the city centre of Beijing and 17.5 kilometres (10.9 miles) away from the town of Yanqing. All other skiing events were held in Taizicheng Area in Chongli District, Zhangjiakou, 220 km (140 mi) from downtown Beijing and 130 km (81 mi) away from Xiaohaituo Mountain Area.[1]

Beijing Cluster

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Olympic Green venues

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Beijing Olympic Green
Non-competition venues
Beijing 2022 Winter Olympic Village

Other venues

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Big Air Shougang.

Yanqing Cluster

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Zhangjiakou Cluster

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  • Zhangjiakou National Cross-Country Centre: Cross-country skiing, Nordic combined (Cross country)
  • Zhangjiakou National Ski Jumping Centre: Ski jumping, Nordic combined (Ski jumping)
  • Zhangjiakou National Biathlon Centre: Biathlon
  • Genting Snow Park: Snowboarding, Freestyle skiing
  • Zhangjiakou Mountain Broadcast Centre: International Broadcast Center[2]
  • Zhangjiakou Mountain Press Centre: Main press center[3]
  • Zhangjiakou Olympic Village
  • Zhangjiakou Medals Plaza

Notes

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  1. ^ Originally simply Zhuangke. It is said that the village Dazhuangke was officially renamed Xidazhuangke/West Dazhuangke to avoid confusion with the other Dazhuangke [Wikidata], also in Yanqing District. Zhuangke (庄窠) approximately means peasant dwellings/households in certain dialects of Jin Chinese; Zhuangke (庄科) is a Mandarin corruption of Jin Chinese Zhuangke (庄窠).<

References

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  1. ^ "Beijing announces gym layout for 2022 Winter Olympics". People's Daily Online. 20 February 2014. Retrieved 23 February 2014.
  2. ^ Kerschbaumer, Ken (February 1, 2022). "Beijing 2022: OBS Ready to Innovate for Winter Games, Set to Create More than 6,000 Hours of Content". Sports Video Group.
  3. ^ "Media center in Zhangjiakou". eng.belta.by. February 3, 2022.

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