sa国际传媒

Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

A look at the main venues of the 1988 Winter Olympic Games in Calgary

CALGARY - A look at the main venues built for the 1988 Calgary Olympics and how they're used today: Olympic Oval Home of the Canadian long-track speedskating team and heavily used by the public for recreational sports.
CPT103080993_high.jpg
World figure skating champion Brian Orser carries the Canadian flag as he leads the Canadian Olympic team into McMahon Stadium in Calgary during the opening ceremonies of the XV Olympic Winter Games on February 13, 1988. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Paul Chiasson

CALGARY - A look at the main venues built for the 1988 Calgary Olympics and how they're used today:

Olympic Oval

Home of the Canadian long-track speedskating team and heavily used by the public for recreational sports. Complex also includes a human performance laboratory. A new roof was installed last year.

sa国际传媒 Olympic Park

sa国际传媒's bobsled, luge and skeleton teams and the ski jump team train at COP. It's the place where many Calgarians learn to ski and snowboard. The third and final phase of the $204-million Winter Sport Institute is scheduled to be completed in April. Hockey sa国际传媒, Alpine sa国际传媒 and the National Sport School relocated to COP.

Olympic Saddledome

Now the Scotiabank Saddledome, it was built in 1983 and was the first Olympic venue completed. Built by the provincial and federal governments for $97.7 million then, it was the site of the Battle of the Brians and Elizabeth Manley's silver medal in figure skating. The Calgary Flames lease it from the city for the NHL club, the WHL's Hitmen and National Lacrosse League's Roughnecks.

Canmore Nordic Centre

The Nordic Centre 100 kilometres west of Calgary held the cross-country and biathlon races as well as the cross-country portion of the nordic combined event. The Alberta government spent $25.6 million on a refurbishment between 2004 and 2008. Canmore is the training base for the Canadian cross-country and biathlon teams and hosts World Cup races. It's a mountain bike hotspot in the summer.

Nakiska at Mount Allan

Nakiska, 90 minutes west of Calgary in Kananaskis, hosted all alpine ski events in '88. sa国际传媒's Karen Percy won two bronze medals there. The Alberta government paid for its construction, but it's now a private ski resort operated by Resorts of the Canadian Rockies. sa国际传媒's alpine ski team uses Nakiska for training in November before the World Cup season opens.