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Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Chicago 2016!

The major contenders for the 2016 Olympic bid include Rio De Janeiro, Tokyo, Madrid, and my personal favorite - Chicago. The final vote won't be for about another year and a half (Oct 2, 2009), however there is much planning that must take place before we even know for sure who the winner will be.

Holding the Olympic Games has historically proven to improve the city's economy drastically. The Games injected $7 billion to Sydney's economy, bumped Barcelona up to a tier 1 tourist destination, added 140,000 additional jobs in Vancouver, and increased Beijing's residential property values 59%.

In Chicago, about $1 billion of venues would be built to accommodate the Olympics. Experts predict that the games would bring an additional 250,000-500,000 tourists to Chicago for 5-7 years after, and would create 1/2 - 1 million square feet of additional downtown absorption due to the need for sales offices, vendor locations, support sites, etc. In other words... while the city might be crowded with tourists for a couple months, just IMAGINE the immense economic benefits our city will gain for many years thereafter.

The exciting thing is if Chicago gets the Olympics, the plan is to integrate most of the events into the city limits, rather than setting up a megaplex structure 50 miles out like many other host cities have done or plan to do. Notable locations planned for various events and support sites include:

- Lincoln Park: Tennis center, triathlon start
- United Center: Basketball
- McCormick Place: Paralympics, press center
- University of Illinois Pavilion: Boxing
- Soldier Field: Football
- Northerly Island: Beach volleyball, BMX biking
- Jackson Park: Hockey
- Washington Park: Olympic Stadium (will be built for a 70k capacity, which will be downsized after the games to a 5-10k capacity)
- South Loop along the Lake (near McCormick): Olympic Village where the athletes will live (this will be comprised of 2300 four-bedroom units, which will later be retro-fitted to mostly 2 bedrooms and sold to the public)

Check out volunteer opportunities to help promote the Chicago bid at http://www.chicago2106.org/ and keep in mind the great benefits you'll reap should the Olympics end up in our city eight years from now.

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