Temporary housing for athletes, coaches and IOC officials in a host city
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Olympic Villages are built to house all participating athletes during the two weeks of the Games, as well as officials and athletic trainers.[1] After the Games are over, the Olympic Village is typically sold or rented to the local population and turned into a new residential zone for the host city.
After the
Munich massacre at the
1972 Olympics, the Villages have been made extremely secure. Only athletes, trainers and officials are allowed to room at the Village, though family members and former Olympic athletes are allowed inside with proper checks. Press and media are also barred.
History
For the first editions of the modern Olympic Games, between
1896 and
1920, there were no official living arrangements for athletes. Some athletes stayed in hotels or hostels, others in schools or barracks, and some even slept in the boats they had taken to the host city.[2]
The prototype for the Olympic Village comes from
Pierre de Coubertin, then president of the
International Olympic Committee. The "General Technical Rules" applicable to the
1924 Summer Games in
Paris stipulated that "The Organising Committee for the Olympic Games is required to provide the athletes with accommodation, bedding and food, at a fixed rate which shall be set beforehand per person and per day…."[3]
As result, the organizers built wooden huts and established an accommodation centre near the
Stade Olympique de Colombes called the "Olympic Village," allowing the various world teams to stay in the same location, under the same conditions, and with common services.[3]
Consideration was given to creating an Olympic Village ahead of the
1928 Games in Amsterdam, but the organizers opted for other solutions.[3]
The accommodation provided for the
1932 Summer Games in
Los Angeles is considered to be the first official modern Olympic Village, with a capacity of 2,000 people and located to the west of the city.[1][3] Consisting of a group of buildings with rooms to lodge athletes (men only), as well as providing a place to eat and train, it serves as the model for today's Olympic Villages. It also provided certain community services for the first time, including a hospital, a fire station, and a post office.[2]
Following the 1932 Games, a Village would be created for every edition of the Summer Games, apart from the
1948 London Games due to material challenges brought on by the immediate
post-war period. For the
Winter Games between 1924 and 1956, the teams would still mainly stay in hotels, with the exception of the
1952 Games in Oslo, where three accommodation sites were created.[3]
Women, on the other hand, stayed in other accommodation sites until 1952. This changed
with the Melbourne Games of 1956, where women had their own part of the main Olympic Village.[2] This area of the Village would not admit male athletes, and it was only from the
1984 Games in Los Angeles onward that athletes were accommodated by team rather than gender.[3]
At the Paris Olympic Games scheduled for the summer of 2024, organizers plan to distribute 300,000 condoms to athletes, staff, and members of the press in the Olympic Village, aiming to promote comfort and enthusiasm among the more than 14,000 residents. This tradition of distributing condoms at the Olympics dates back to the Seoul Olympics in 1988 and has since seen a significant increase in quantities distributed, reaching 450,000 condoms at the Rio Olympics in 2016.[5][6]
List of Olympic Villages
Prototype complexes:
Athens 1906 (Intercalated Games): The
Zappeion, which was used during
Athens 1896 as the main Fencing Hall, was used in 1906 as a (not purpose-built) Olympic Village.[7]
Paris 1924: In Paris in 1924, a number of cabins were built near the stadium to house visiting athletes; the complex was called "Olympic Village".[8]
Official Olympic Villages
Los Angeles 1932: An Olympic Village was built for the first time in
Baldwin Hills, occupied by male athletes. It consisted of several hundred buildings, including post and telegraph offices, an amphitheater, a hospital, a fire department, and a bank. Female athletes were housed at the Chapman Park Hotel on
Wilshire Boulevard.[9][10][11]
Berlin 1936: About 145 one- and two-story apartment buildings, Haus der Nationen refectory, Hindenburghaus theater, a hospital, an indoor arena, a swimming pool and a sauna in
Wustermark about 9.5 kilometres west of
Berlin. Used as barracks for over 50 years, the buildings are partially ruined. A men's residence has been restored under the name "
Jesse Owens house".
Helsinki 1952: The first Olympic Village, Olympiakylä, was constructed in the
Käpylä district of
Helsinki for the planned
1940 Summer Olympics, which were cancelled due to World War II. Another Olympic Village, Kisakylä, was built nearby for the 1952 Olympics. Kisakylä couldn't accommodate all athletes so other villages were also designated for instance in
Otaniemi and the
Santahamina military base. Both Olympiakylä and Kisakylä areas are listed by
Docomomo as significant examples of modern architecture in Finland.[12][13]
Melbourne 1956: The area in
Heidelberg West, Victoria, where the athletes stayed is still called "Olympic Village". After the games, athlete residences were used for public housing. The area now consists of a sports center, a primary school, shopping strip, a community health centre which also houses a registered training organization and a legal service.
Squaw Valley 1960: Four identical three-story apartment buildings, two of which still stand, modified into condominiums.
Rome 1960: consist of 33 buildings with two, three, four and even five floors.
Innsbruck 1964 and
1976: A two phases housing buildings at Neu Arzl Olympic Village district.
Tokyo 1964: Main village in Yoyoki, with 4 other satellite village in Tokyo.[14]
Mexico City 1968: 904 apartments distributed in 29 multi-story buildings in the Miguel Hidalgo Olympic Village Complex.
Calgary 1988: Presently student accommodations on the campus of the
University of Calgary. The athlete's village consisted of the existing Kananaskis, Rundle, Castle, Norquay and Brewster buildings, as well as the newly constructed Glacier and Olympus buildings.
Seoul 1988: Twenty-one multiple-story buildings located in Jamsil.
Barcelona 1992: A new neighbourhood,
La Vila Olímpica, was built on reclaimed sea front in
Poblenou; it became residential after the Games. Secondary villages were built in
Banyoles and
La Seu d'Urgell for rowing and white water canoeing athletes respectively.[15]
Nagano 1998: The village is located 7 kilometers southwest of
Nagano Station. The total land space is 19 hectares. There are 1032 apartments in 22 buildings, and is capable of accommodating 3,000 people. A secondary Village was in
Karuizawa, the site for the newly entered Olympic sport of curling. Karuizawa is about 70 kilometers southeast of Nagano City. 120 people from 9 countries stayed at the Karuizawa Skate Center Hotel during the Winter Games.
Sydney 2000: A new suburb,
Newington, which became residential following the Games.
Athens 2004: A new suburb composed of four- to five-story apartments in the
Parnitha area located in northeast Athens adjacent to
Maroussi, the suburb where the OAKA complex, is located. The Athens Olympic Village also became a residential area following the Games. Today, the village with a capacity of approximately 10,000 people is in use.
Turin 2006: The three Olympic Villages were located in the city of Turin and in the towns of Bardonecchia and Sestriere.
Tokyo 2020: Located in
Harumi, an island district of
Chūō, Tokyo (central Tokyo). The
Harumi Futo village had 21 residential buildings with over 5,000 units. There are also two satellite villages, one in
Saitama near the track cycling and another in
Enoshima for sailing.
Milan-Cortina 2026: The Milan Olympic Village is being built at the
Scalo Porta Urbana district. The Cortina Olympic Village is also planned to be built in Fiame, a small village located around five kilometres from the centre of Cortina d'Ampezzo. Another two villages were planned near the
Valtellina and
Val di Fiemme clusters.