St. Moritz Olympic Ice Rink
St. Moritz Olympic Ice Rink (German: Eisstadion Badrutts Park) is an outdoor stadium in St. Moritz, Switzerland. It was the venue for the ice hockey, speedskating and figure skating events, as well as the location of the opening and closing ceremonies at the 1928 Winter Olympics and 1948 Winter Olympics.[1][2][3]
Artist and designer Rolf Sachs now owns the stadium's former land, and the building containing the changing facilities for athletes and officials and observation facility serves as his personal home.[4]
References
- ^ "Best Hosts of Olympic Winter Games Past" Archived 2011-06-06 at the Wayback Machine, onAir magazine, Air Canada, February 2010
- ^ 1928 Winter Olympics official report. Part 2. pp. 1-7, 15. (in French)
- ^ 1948 Winter Olympics official report. pp. 6, 21, 23. (in French and German)
- ^ MacFarlane, Christina (15 December 2017). "St. Moritz: Meet the man who lives in an Olympic stadium". CNN. Retrieved 16 December 2017.
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- Stade Olympique de Chamonix (Chamonix 1924)
- St. Moritz Olympic Ice Rink (St. Moritz 1928)
- James B. Sheffield Olympic Skating Rink (Lake Placid 1932)
- Große Olympiaschanze (Garmisch-Partenkirchen 1936)
- St. Moritz Olympic Ice Rink (St. Moritz 1948)
- Bislett Stadium (Oslo 1952)
- Stadio olimpico del ghiaccio (Cortina d'Ampezzo 1956)
- Blyth Arena (Squaw Valley 1960)
- Bergisel Ski Jump and Olympiahalle (Innsbruck 1964)
- Olympic Stadium and Palais des Sports (Grenoble) (Grenoble 1968)
- Makomanai Open Stadium and Makomanai Ice Arena (Sapporo 1972)
- Bergisel Ski Jump and Olympiahalle (Innsbruck 1976)
- Lake Placid Equestrian Stadium and Herb Brooks Arena (Lake Placid 1980)
- Koševo City Stadium and Zetra Olympic Hall (Sarajevo 1984)
- McMahon Stadium (Calgary 1988)
- Théâtre des Cérémonies (Albertville 1992)
- Lysgårdsbakken (Lillehammer 1994)
- Nagano Olympic Stadium (Nagano 1998)
- Rice–Eccles Stadium (Salt Lake City 2002)
- Stadio Olimpico Grande Torino (Turin 2006)
- BC Place (Vancouver 2010)
- Fisht Olympic Stadium (Sochi 2014)
- Pyeongchang Olympic Stadium (Pyeongchang 2018)
- Beijing National Stadium (Beijing 2022)
- San Siro and Verona Arena (Milan–Cortina 2026)
- Allianz Riviera (Nice-French Alps 2030)
- Rice–Eccles Stadium (Salt Lake City 2034)
46°30′05″N 9°50′59″E / 46.5014°N 9.8497°E / 46.5014; 9.8497
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