Utah Olympic Park Jumps
Utah Olympic Park Jumps | |
---|---|
Olympic Park | |
Location | Utah Olympic Park Park City, Utah United States |
Opened | 2001 |
Size | |
K–point | K-90 K-120 |
Hill size | HS100 HS134 |
Hill record | Sven Hannawald (99.0 m in 2002) Adam Malysz (133.5 m in 2001) |
Top events | |
Olympics | 2002 |
The Utah Olympic Park Jumps is a ski jumping venue at the Utah Olympic Park in Park City, Utah, United States. It is a venue in the FIS Ski jumping World Cup and hosted ski jumping at the 2002 Winter Olympics, a role it is expected to reprise for the 2034 Winter Olympics.[1][2][3]
Salt Lake City won its 1995 bid to host the 2002 Winter Olympics, and plans were developed to expand the park. On October 9, 1997 SLOC approved the plan to spend an additional $48 million to upgrade and expand the recently completed park. The plans called for replacing and moving the existing 90-meter ski jump, and building a brand new 120-meter jump.[4]
During summer months, both hills are covered in a special plastic and visitors can go tubing down them in an inner tube with a hard bottom.[5]
References
[edit]- ^ Standard Operating Procedure - Great Salt Lake Water Density Measurement and Salinity Calculation (Report). Utah Geological Survey. 15 September 2020. doi:10.34191/ofr-728.
- ^ "Utah Olympic Park". Utah Olympic Legacy Foundation. Retrieved 22 February 2024.
- ^ "Utah Olympic Park, Park City, UT | Skiing & Hiking". www.visitparkcity.com. Retrieved 22 February 2024.
- ^ Corbett, Rachel (27 June 2016). "Principles Underlying the Adjudication of Selection Disputes Preceding the Salt Lake City Winter Olympic Games: Notes for Adjudicators". Entertainment and Sports Law Journal. 1 (1). doi:10.16997/eslj.186. ISSN 1748-944X.
- ^ "Extreme Tubing". Utah Olympic Legacy Foundation. Retrieved 7 August 2024.
40°42′32″N 111°33′36″W / 40.7088°N 111.5599°W