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Olympic and Paralympic Village

Building the Games

The athletes may be the stars of the 2010 Winter Games, but the backdrops for their amazing feats are these equally impressive venues

by Sheri Radford // Photos by KK Law

The twin domes of BC Place (left) and Canada Hockey Place (right)

CANADA HOCKEY PLACE
Ice Hockey

Though it has a new moniker during the Games, GM Place is still the same arena Vancouverites know and love. Completed in 1995, downtown’s 19,300-seat venue serves as home ice for the Vancouver Canucks during hockey season and hosts big-name concerts ranging from Britney Spears to The Police. Its NHL-sized ice, which is smaller than international-sized ice, is being used during the 2010 Winter Games, marking a first in Olympic history.

UBC THUNDERBIRD ARENA
Ice Hockey, Ice Sledge Hockey

This 6,800-seat arena on the University of British Columbia (UBC) campus opened in 2008. You might call UBC the birthplace of Canada’s Olympic hockey dreams: in 1963 at UBC, in preparation for the 1964 Olympic Winter Games in Austria, Bob Hindmarch and Rev. Father David Bauer established Canada’s first national hockey team. The newborn team almost scored bronze.

VANCOUVER OLYMPIC/PARALYMPIC CENTRE
Curling, Wheelchair Curling

This eco-friendly building, completed in 2009, recycles energy and minimizes water use. Post-Games, it will become a community centre housing a curling rink, ice arena, aquatic centre and library.

PACIFIC COLISEUM
Figure Skating, Short Track Speed Skating
The newly renovated home of the Vancouver Giants hockey team has been used for everything from concerts and basketball games to ice shows and circuses. Opened in 1968, this 14,200-seat arena was home ice for the Vancouver Canucks until GM Place was completed in 1995.

The award-winning Richmond Olympic Oval

RICHMOND OLYMPIC OVAL
Speed Skating

Named the 2010 Winter Games’s “sexiest” venue by Omega Lifetime magazine, this new building on the Fraser River keeps racking up awards for its stunning design and eco-friendly building practices. The extraordinary 2.6-hectare (6.5-acre) roof, made from pine-beetle-damaged wood, collects and funnels rainwater, while energy required to make the speed-skating ice is captured and used elsewhere in the building. During the Games, you might notice 13 million cranberries floating in the shapes of a maple leaf and the Olympic rings in the river outside the Oval; this is a tribute to Richmond’s iconic berry. Post-Games, the Oval will house fitness and sports medicine centres, as well as ice rinks, hardwood courts and running tracks.

WHISTLER CREEKSIDE
Alpine Skiing

After several unsuccessful attempts over four decades, Whistler (in partnership with Vancouver) finally won the bid to host the Winter Games. Now Whistler Mountain’s original base, which opened in 1966, has undergone more than $30 million in upgrades to prepare for the monumental event. Men’s alpine skiing events take place on the black-diamond Dave Murray Downhill, the world’s second-longest downhill course, while Franz’s Run hosts the women’s Olympic and all Paralympic alpine events.

WHISTLER OLYMPIC/PARALYMPIC PARK
Biathlon, Cross-Country Skiing, Nordic Combined, Ski Jumping

Opened in 2008, after years of work and $120 million spent, this sprawling park in the picturesque Callaghan Valley hosts a third of all the Olympic events and half of all the Paralympic events. The park’s elevation ranges between 840 and 930 m (2,756 and 3,051 ft).

THE WHISTLER SLIDING CENTRE
Bobsleigh, Luge, Skeleton

Completed in 2007, this slick new venue is part of an extremely elite club: there are just 15 international-competition sliding tracks in the world. And if the secret to a building’s success is location, location, location, then it has a bright future, indeed. It sits on an area of Blackcomb Mountain called Wild Spirit Place (Kwekwayex Kwelh7aynexw) by the Squamish people and Spirited Ground (A7x7ulmecw) by the Lil’wat people.

CYPRESS MOUNTAIN
Freestyle Skiing, Snowboard

A 30-minute drive from downtown Vancouver, this area is popular with locals for

The Olympic and Paralympic Village Vancouver, on False Creek

skiing, snowboarding, tubing and snowshoeing. In case of mild weather, a snowmaking system (complete with 35 snow guns) guarantees a winter wonderland.

OLYMPIC AND PARALYMPIC  VILLAGE VANCOUVER
Forget about the cost overruns and financing snafus: this billion-dollar village is a wonder to behold. Located on the waterfront in False Creek, with a view of downtown, the low- and mid-rise apartment buildings are housing 3,000 athletes and officials in style during the Games. After, they will be sold as eco-friendly condos.

OLYMPIC AND PARALYMPIC VILLAGE WHISTLER
In the gorgeous Cheakamus Valley, bordered by forests and the Cheakamus River, this mix of apartments, townhomes and hostels comprises the home-away-from-home for more than 4,000 athletes and officials during the Games.

BC PLACE
For the first time ever, the Winter Games’s opening and closing ceremonies are being held indoors. The nightly victory ceremonies, featuring a stellar line-up of musical acts, also take place inside downtown Vancouver’s 55,000-seat domed stadium, which opened in 1983. Better take a snapshot of the venue’s marshmallow-like roof, since it won’t be around much longer: a state-of-the-art retractable roof will replace it next year.

WHISTLER MEDALS PLAZA
After the Games’s medal presentations and nightly concerts are a mere memory, this outdoor venue’s amphitheatre, children’s play area and performance spaces will still attract locals.

WHISTLER MEDIA CENTRE
Journalists lucky enough to be assigned to Whistler are headquartered in the

The newly expanded Vancouver Convention Centre is the Main Media Centre during the Games

Whistler Conference Centre, which underwent a huge renovation in 2003. The building is now larger—and kinder to the environment.

MAIN MEDIA CENTRE
Media assigned to Vancouver are in for a treat at the newly expanded Vancouver Convention Centre. Its east building, which showed off the city to the world during the Expo ‘86 World’s Fair, and its brand new west building now cover 111,500 sq m (1.2 million sq ft), or four city blocks. Approximately 40% of the west building juts out over the ocean. Its interior walls, made from renewable Vancouver Island and Sunshine Coast hemlock, resemble artfully stacked lumber. And its 2.5-hectare (6-acre) living roof—complete with four beehives, a bee-keeper and 400,000 plants—helps the environment.

You Are Here: Cambie Village

By Véronique Darwin

Check out Vancouver’s newest big-box shopping hot spot, located between two of the new Canada Line SkyTrain stations

The new Canada Line SkyTrain. Photo by KK Law

The new Canada Line SkyTrain. Photo by KK Law

FASHION FINDS
Brand-name labels for a fraction of the price fill the racks at Winners. Stock is updated weekly, so you never know what’s in store. Sharing the space is HomeSense, selling unique items for the home and fun holiday decorations. Danish lingerie shop Change offers professional bra fittings and carries both comfortable and sexy underthings. Lululemon’s design store Lululab highlights in-store designers and sells a local must-have: yoga pants.

EVERYDAY ESSENTIALS
Need a pharmacy or a photo developer? Head to London Drugs for these and more, such as magazines, toiletries and local coffee chain Caffé Artigiano. Best Buy has

Try the Sumac Ridge sparkler, Tribute

Try the Sumac Ridge sparkler, Tribute

everything electronic, including cameras, DVDs, laptops and iPods. In search of home hardware, outdoor gear or even batteries? Visit Canadian Tire or Home Depot.

TOP TASTES
Whole Foods Market, the massive natural and organic grocery store, curbs hunger cravings with a hot-food buffet, salad bar, brick-oven pizza slices and fresh-made burritos. Still feeling peckish? Head to Falafel Plus for organic, house-made falafels. At the nearby BC Liquor Store, pick up a bottle of Jackson Triggs Esprit or Sumac Ridge Tribute sparkling wine (pictured); proceeds support Canadian Olympic athletes.

Take the new Canada Line SkyTrain to the Olympic Village Station or the Broadway-City Hall Station, or walk south from downtown over the Cambie Street Bridge.

Riding the Rails

By Kristina Urquhart

All aboard at Vancouver International Aiport. Photo by KK Law

All aboard at Vancouver International Aiport. Photo by KK Law

It took four long years of digging, drilling, boring and building, but Canada Line—the newest addition to SkyTrain, Vancouver’s automated light rapid transit system—has been up and running since Aug. 17, three months ahead of schedule and in plenty of time for the 2010 Winter Games.

Now that the dust has settled, Vancouver has a state-of-the-art transportation link between the city centre, Vancouver International Airport (YVR) and Richmond, one of the region’s quickest growing cities—which has been a welcome relief for busy commuters looking to shave minutes off their transit time. Combined with the existing Expo and Millennium SkyTrain lines, the network also reaches neighbouring Burnaby, New Westminster and Surrey.

The sleekest and smoothest of the three trains, the Canada Line features 16 modern stations and wider, longer cars than its counterparts. The extra space means room for luggage so travel-weary passengers can zip from the airport

Travellers at the Canada Line'd YVR-Airport Station. Photo by KK Law

Travellers at the Canada Line YVR-Airport Station. Photo by KK Law

to the downtown core, hassle-free. Larger trains are also better equipped to handle the thousands of additional rail users expected during the 2010 Winter Games, providing easy access to the SeaBus, the LiveCity entertainment sites, and several Games venues, including the Richmond Olympic Oval and BC Place.

Worthy train trips? Take the Canada Line to Olympic Village Station and walk around the picturesque Olympic and Paralympic Village Vancouver, where Canadian and international athletes will reside throughout the 2010 Winter Games. Or disembark at Oakridge-41st Avenue to shop for designer duds at Oakridge Centre. Or try your luck at the River Rock Casino, which is adjacent to Bridgeport Station.

For maps, fares and schedules, visit www.translink.ca.

CANADA LINE BY THE NUMBERS

3.75

The current cost of a trip from the city centre to YVR is $3.75, or $2.50 on weekends, holidays and weekdays after 6:30 p.m.

26

Vancouver is the only Canadian city with a rapid transit link from the city centre to an international airport. The ride from Waterfront to YVR is a mere 26 minutes.

68

Canada Line adds 19 km (11.8 mi) of track to the existing SkyTrain network, which makes it the longest automated rapid transit system in the world, totalling 68 km (42.2 mi).

100,000

About 100,000 passengers are expected to ride the Canada Line per day in 2010, with increased ridership during the 2010 Winter Games.

2,000,000,000

The total cost of the project hovers just above $2 billion.

It Takes a Village

IT TAKES A VILLAGE

Stroll along the newly finished False Creek seawall, where the Olympic and Paralympic Village Vancouver has finally taken form

By Jennifer Patterson

Thousands of athletes and officials will make this community their home starting in January 2010. Photo by KK Law

Thousands of athletes and officials will make this community their home starting in January 2010. Photo by KK Law

Nothing leaves a visitor as breathless as Vancouver’s natural surroundings and panoramic views. Imagine living alongside the waterfront in False Creek, looking across to picturesque downtown, all highlighted by a backdrop of snow-capped mountains. That’s exactly what over 3,000 athletes and officials will see at the start of each day as they make the Olympic and Paralympic Village their home-away-from-home during the 2010 Winter Games.
This billion-dollar project has had its ups and downs—including the recent news of being $130-million over budget—but come game time, all will be forgotten as hockey players, speed skaters and others decorate the suites with their national colours, flags and banners. Built to be sold as condos after the Games, every unit will be temporarily furnished, and each kitchen will be sealed off, since the athletes and officials will use a communal dining hall. And not only are these 18 condo buildings easy on the eyes, they are also easy on the earth, thanks to both partial solar power and an environmentally friendly heating system. What about amenities? A large drugstore, gourmet grocer and private liquor store will soon join the buildings.
The Village is easily accessible via the new Canada Line SkyTrain; hop off at the Olympic Village Station and head east.