Ruling Czar 19 Posted April 7, 2010 Report Share Posted April 7, 2010 Well we already know some of the best facts about vancouver The first city of its size to host an Olympics. The first indoor opening ceremony. The largest crowd ever assembled in the downtown core of a city on the final day of the games (appoximately 500,000) but what else is there? Link to post Share on other sites
Olympian2004 511 Posted April 9, 2010 Report Share Posted April 9, 2010 The first city of its size to host an Olympics. You probably mean, "The first city of its size to host an Winter Olympics." But even then: Is that so? Speaking of the size of the hosting municipality only, Vancouver is even smaller then Torino, Calgary or Sapporo. The City of Torino has more than 900,000 inhabitants, Calgary has a little less than 1 million, Sapporo has 1.9 millions, while Vancouver has about 600,000. Only in terms of the metropolitan region (which has 2.1 million inhabitants), Vancouver might have been the biggest winter host so far (but not the first city with more than 1 million inhabitants). Link to post Share on other sites
SkiFreak 123 Posted April 9, 2010 Report Share Posted April 9, 2010 You probably mean, "The first city of its size to host an Winter Olympics." But even then: Is that so? Speaking of the size of the hosting municipality only, Vancouver is even smaller then Torino, Calgary or Sapporo. The City of Torino has more than 900,000 inhabitants, Calgary has a little less than 1 million, Sapporo has 1.9 millions, while Vancouver has about 600,000. Only in terms of the metropolitan region (which has 2.1 million inhabitants), Vancouver might have been the biggest winter host so far (but not the first city with more than 1 million inhabitants). If you don't count the various lower mainland municipalities like Richmond, Burnaby, Surrey, Coquitlam, Port Coquitlam, etc. I think Vancouver is still bigger than Calgary. Not sure if this is true, but wasn't Vancouver considered the greenest games so far? (I'm refering to environmental sustainability, not the weather on Cypress ) Link to post Share on other sites
mr.x 24 Posted April 9, 2010 Report Share Posted April 9, 2010 You probably mean, "The first city of its size to host an Winter Olympics." But even then: Is that so? Speaking of the size of the hosting municipality only, Vancouver is even smaller then Torino, Calgary or Sapporo. The City of Torino has more than 900,000 inhabitants, Calgary has a little less than 1 million, Sapporo has 1.9 millions, while Vancouver has about 600,000. Only in terms of the metropolitan region (which has 2.1 million inhabitants), Vancouver might have been the biggest winter host so far (but not the first city with more than 1 million inhabitants). But you do realize that the City of Vancouver is geographically quite small at about 120 sq. kms compared to Calgary and other past cities. Long ago, the Metro Vancouver region decided not to amalgamate/merge its suburb cities into Vancouver. And to top it, the size of the Metro Vancouver region is only about 40% of what the numbers tell you if you subtract the undeveloped North Shore mountains for our water reservoirs, the forest parklands, the agricultural reserve, etc. Same goes for the City of Vancouver, though not to the same extent. You could fit six City of Vancouver's into the City of Calgary, which is its own metro region - no suburbs. And with Torino...well, there are very few North American cities that are overall denser than those of Europe. Other superlatives: - Vancouver hosted the 21st Winter Olympics; Montreal hosted the 21st Summer Olympics - largest Winter Games Opening and Closing Ceremony crowds...60,000 at each ceremony at BC Place - largest nightly Medal Ceremonies crowds...up until Vancouver, the host cities would have just one medal ceremony venue with a capacity of 6,000-8,000. But with Vancouver, we had BC Place at 30,000 and a second Whistler venue at 8,000. - perhaps the mildest host city climate yet? (of course, Sochi will take that title soon) - the earliest sports venue completion in decades, all thanks to VANOC (whereas recent past host cities were still pouring concrete in the weeks and months before the Games started...Vancouver finished all of its sports venues 2-years before the Games began) - possibly, the most environmentally friendly Winter Olympics yet - both summer and winter - one of the most atmospheric host cities yet, along the ranks with Lillehammer and Sydney (though on the last day of the Games, Jacques Rogge said that it was much more atmospheric than both Lillehammer and Sydney) - the longest domestic/national Olympic torch relay in history (both Summer and Winter)...though Sochi might beat this considering the size of Russia, and assuming the Russians want to bring the flame everywhere - the most financially sound organizing committee in recent memory? (even with a recession, VANOC adjusted accordingly and was rock solid as the Games neared.....with TOROC, in the months before the 2006 Olympics the organizing committee was near bankruptcy) - the most Live Sites/free events from an Olympic host city (in 2008, the IOC was concerned about the plans and even said it might be "too much" as it was "more than what Atlanta, Nagano, Sydney, Salt Lake, Athens, Torino, and Beijing had combined") - the most gold medals won by the host nation in the Winter Olympics - the Best Winter Games Ever? Link to post Share on other sites
SkiFreak 123 Posted April 11, 2010 Report Share Posted April 11, 2010 Two more I thought of: Heaviest medals First medals to be made from junk - literally. Recycled metals were used in the production, so Crosby's gold could've formerly been someones home computer. -this was another point to add to greenest games. Link to post Share on other sites
baron-pierreIV 1693 Posted April 11, 2010 Report Share Posted April 11, 2010 The muddiest, rain-iest Winter Olympics? Highest-priced Ceremony tickets ever. Link to post Share on other sites
Ruling Czar 19 Posted April 14, 2010 Author Report Share Posted April 14, 2010 The Games with the most spectacular backdrop scenery ever! That is unquestionable for sure! Link to post Share on other sites
Sir Rols 1900 Posted April 14, 2010 Report Share Posted April 14, 2010 (edited) The Games with the most spectacular backdrop scenery ever! That is unquestionable for sure! Lovely, yes. But that's also unquestionably in the eye of the beholder. Edited April 14, 2010 by Sir Roltel Link to post Share on other sites
4gamesandcounting 39 Posted April 16, 2010 Report Share Posted April 16, 2010 Ruling Czar, on 15 April 2010 - 09:54 AM, said:The Games with the most spectacular backdrop scenery ever! That is unquestionable for sure! Lovely, yes. But that's also unquestionably in the eye of the beholder. I loved Vancouver's setting - really beautiful for a winter games, but on TV quite a lot of the alpine events just looked foggy (from what my family at home tell me anyway)! Link to post Share on other sites
mr.x 24 Posted April 16, 2010 Report Share Posted April 16, 2010 ^ our summers in this city are so much nicer. Link to post Share on other sites
NY20?? 98 Posted April 16, 2010 Report Share Posted April 16, 2010 I don't think there was anything particularly interesting about Whistler to look at, but Vancouver's another story. The shots of the harbor with the flame in the foreground, Olympic rings in the distance, and the mountains in the background were really memorable. The city itself is really telegenic anyway. Link to post Share on other sites
baron-pierreIV 1693 Posted April 17, 2010 Report Share Posted April 17, 2010 NBC's most expensive Olympic debacle so far. Link to post Share on other sites
SkiFreak 123 Posted April 19, 2010 Report Share Posted April 19, 2010 Just watching NBC's coverage of the OC and was reminded about something: First time the athletes came into the stadium near the beginning of the OC - makes sense, let the athletes watch the show too. Hope they do this for all future games, winter and summer. Link to post Share on other sites
baron-pierreIV 1693 Posted April 19, 2010 Report Share Posted April 19, 2010 Just watching NBC's coverage of the OC and was reminded about something: First time the athletes came into the stadium near the beginning of the OC - makes sense, let the athletes watch the show too. Hope they do this for all future games, winter and summer. Highly unlikely for summer. Where do you put 9,000 bodies for the 2.5 hours? The Org Committees aren't going to lose the revenue from 9,000 "A" seats just to seat those spoiled brats. You're elevating those 'athletes' far more than they deserve in society. To me, athletes come below teachers and accountants. 1 Link to post Share on other sites
SkiFreak 123 Posted April 27, 2010 Report Share Posted April 27, 2010 The last games Juan Antonio Samaranch attended. Link to post Share on other sites
Speedsk8er 8 Posted May 5, 2010 Report Share Posted May 5, 2010 Well we already know some of the best facts about vancouver The first city of its size to host an Olympics. The first indoor opening ceremony. The largest crowd ever assembled in the downtown core of a city on the final day of the games (appoximately 500,000) but what else is there? Here are a few more: Rainiest Winter Olympics Most technical difficulties at a (indoor) speedskating oval (despite years to prepare and millions of $$$) Most lip-synching during ceremonial performances Most banal and irrelevant song lyrics to ever grace a closing ceremony ("He's like...so whatever."; "Hey, hey, you, you, I don't like your girlfriend No way, no way, I think you need a new one." etc., etc.) Most vulgar subject matter of any closing ceremony (talk of how Canadians "pee in the snow" or have "sex in canoes") Link to post Share on other sites
ticonderoga 2 Posted June 21, 2010 Report Share Posted June 21, 2010 Here are a few more: Rainiest Winter Olympics Most technical difficulties at a (indoor) speedskating oval (despite years to prepare and millions of $$$) Most lip-synching during ceremonial performances Most banal and irrelevant song lyrics to ever grace a closing ceremony ("He's like...so whatever."; "Hey, hey, you, you, I don't like your girlfriend No way, no way, I think you need a new one." etc., etc.) Most vulgar subject matter of any closing ceremony (talk of how Canadians "pee in the snow" or have "sex in canoes") Well I did not think it rained a whole lot during the games (it is the pacific Northwest after all)....in fact I though the weather was great. Also I think the most teachnical glitches for speed skating occured in 1992 in Albertville. What I remember... - Great opening ceremonies - Best atmosphere I have seen during a olympic games. - Wonderful fans and people - Great events and Venues. - Fantastic vollenteers. - Beautiful City and wonderful free events downtown. All in all other then a few hiccups I think this was a top notch games. Link to post Share on other sites
baron-pierreIV 1693 Posted June 21, 2010 Report Share Posted June 21, 2010 What I remember... - Great opening ceremonies - Best atmosphere I have seen during a olympic games. - Wonderful fans and people - Great events and Venues. - Fantastic vollenteers. - Beautiful City and wonderful free events downtown. All in all other then a few hiccups I think this was a top notch games. Well, ticonderoga, a number of your 'superlatives' listed above are subjective rather than objective. Link to post Share on other sites
Ruling Czar 19 Posted July 3, 2010 Author Report Share Posted July 3, 2010 Most innovative medal design ever! Link to post Share on other sites
SkiFreak 123 Posted July 3, 2010 Report Share Posted July 3, 2010 Most innovative medal design ever! Yeah, and heavy. I held them at the Canadian Mint Pavilion, and then Jon Montgomery had his gold medal here in Kelowna and I was able to hold it too - they really are heavy medals, the heaviest from any games I believe. The athletes also got these nice little wool cases for the medals with the VANOC logo on them. Link to post Share on other sites
SkiFreak 123 Posted July 6, 2010 Report Share Posted July 6, 2010 According to Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olympic_Anthem): Combination of Different LanguagesAt the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, the anthem was performed in English and French. This was the only Olympics in which the anthem was performed in both of the official languages of the Olympics. Link to post Share on other sites
Ruling Czar 19 Posted July 31, 2010 Author Report Share Posted July 31, 2010 And let's not forget the Red Mittens which to date appears to have be the most successful winter olympics merchandise! Link to post Share on other sites
baron-pierreIV 1693 Posted July 31, 2010 Report Share Posted July 31, 2010 And let's not forget the Red Mittens which to date appears to have be the most successful winter olympics merchandise! uh-huh, and what proof do you have? The Roots Beret of the US team for 200 was a hot seller in a nation of 295 million at the time. Link to post Share on other sites
mr.x 24 Posted August 1, 2010 Report Share Posted August 1, 2010 uh-huh, and what proof do you have? The Roots Beret of the US team for 200 was a hot seller in a nation of 295 million at the time. Proudly Canadian. Link to post Share on other sites
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