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View Poll Results: Are you planning to attend 2010 events?
Yes 108 62.07%
No 66 37.93%
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  #421  
Old Posted Dec 15, 2009, 5:20 AM
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^ i think at this rate, they could find a few more million for decorations and will still be able to leave a surplus that might be in the tens and tens of millions for the post-Games venue legacy fund.

The decorations budget was severely axed, it was the first to go during the recession. VANOC had planned on doing much more in big decorations than just the lone Olympic rings sitting out in Coal Harbour.
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  #422  
Old Posted Dec 15, 2009, 5:47 AM
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^Agreed. The Coal Harbour rings are so sad and lonely.

Time to stick some monster rings on the Lions Gate Bridge or Grouse Mountain. Let's show the world that we know how to go big (as opposed to going boutique).
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  #423  
Old Posted Dec 15, 2009, 6:44 AM
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^ I know for a fact that rings were also planned for Burrard Street Bridge and the Lions Gate (not from the bid videos, but from an article two years ago that quoted VANOC reps that they were looking at those two bridges plus what we now have today at Coal Harbour).

They really took a swipe at decorations, hopefully most of it can still be restored at this point.
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  #424  
Old Posted Dec 15, 2009, 6:46 AM
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Awesome news!
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  #425  
Old Posted Dec 15, 2009, 3:08 PM
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Officials get ready to make hockey the centerpiece of Olympics

LA Times, HELENE ELLIOTT ON THE NHL
From Vancouver, Canada

When most hockey fans watch the Vancouver Canucks play at GM Place, they focus on goaltender Roberto Luongo's acrobatics or who's skating alongside Daniel and Henrik Sedin.

When Denis Hainault is in the arena, he's scouting places to put people and equipment during the Winter Olympics.

Hainault, a former Hockey Canada administrator and coach who guided a young Luc Robitaille, is the director of ice sports for the Vancouver Olympic Organizing Committee. He's also general manager of GM Place, which will be called Canada Hockey Place during the Games.

The new name is among many changes that will take place before the Games begin Feb. 12.

"We're going to take over the building on Jan. 28, at one minute after midnight. The Canucks are playing on the 27th and immediately after the game the transition will start," Hainault said Monday.

"It's just like for a big concert, but this is going to be major and for almost five weeks."

The recently renovated Canucks' locker room will house the Canadian men's team. Another locker room will be built for Team USA, six temporary dressing rooms will be set up in trailers, and the media work room will be transformed into a game-day locker room.

The team benches will be extended by about six feet to accommodate 23-player rosters and between the penalty boxes a larger space will be built for statisticians and timekeepers. About 2,000 seats will be removed from the 18,810-seat arena to accommodate international broadcasters and writers.

Advertisements will be removed from the boards and the ice to comply with Olympic regulations. The ice, though staying at NHL dimensions, will be rebuilt with the help of NHL ice guru Dan Craig. The red and blue lines will stay the same as for NHL games but the trapezoid behind the net will vanish and the crease will be semi-circular to conform to international rules.

"There will be so much hockey played on that ice that we want to make sure that we start from scratch and make sure that it's good level," Hainault said.

But without any good luck charms beneath center ice.

Canadian ice-maker Trent Evans, working at the 2002 Salt Lake City Olympics, planted a Canadian $1 coin -- known as a loonie -- at the center ice dot. It became a legend when the Canadian men's and women's teams won gold.

They'll have to win without a lucky loonie this time. Hainault has forbidden his team from hiding a good luck charm at Canada Hockey Place.

"We want to play the games as fair as we can for all the teams and that's what we're going to do," he said.

Hainault said he and his staff anticipate working 24/7 before the Games to get everything ready, but it's a labor of love.

"I'm not taking anything away from any other Olympics or World Cup or world championship before," he said, "but this will be something special, to have every single team with essentially the best players of every country -- unless injuries -- here in the country of the birth of hockey and in a city that is totally hockey crazy. It's going to be the hockey Olympics, and to be part of that for me is absolutely unbelievable."

Slap shots

The NHL board of governors will meet today and Wednesday in Pebble Beach. On the agenda are reports on player safety, head shots, the Olympics and business and legal matters.

The governors also will discuss the NHL's agreement to sell the Phoenix Coyotes to Ice Edge Holdings. That group, made up of Canadian and American businessmen, plans to keep the team in Glendale, Ariz., but wants to play some games in Saskatoon, Canada. That would pave the way to move north if they can't turn things around in Arizona -- and they probably can't.

[email protected]


http://www.latimes.com/sports/la-sp-elliott15-2009dec15,0,6146457.column
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  #426  
Old Posted Dec 15, 2009, 11:33 PM
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  #427  
Old Posted Dec 16, 2009, 8:23 PM
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Royal Tower Update.
Wonder whether they can apply wraps in the rain?
Taken by me today:

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  #428  
Old Posted Dec 16, 2009, 8:51 PM
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thats big - is it one the east face of the building?
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  #429  
Old Posted Dec 16, 2009, 8:54 PM
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Bleh, RBC look like shit in the rain.
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  #430  
Old Posted Dec 17, 2009, 10:23 AM
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i was in the HBC olympic store today for the first time ever it is really cool, so much overpriced crap but some seemed good, the odd piece not made in china at least, it was extremely busy too - mostly the clothing areas, didn't seem like anyone had payment issues but its seems like a potential loss of sales being so strict - oh well
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  #431  
Old Posted Dec 17, 2009, 4:38 PM
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Vancouver Art Gallery presents renowned group of Leonardo da Vinci Drawings for the first time

Some of the most important drawings of the human body ever created will be presented at the Vancouver Art Gallery from February 6 to May 2, 2010. For the first time in history, the anatomical drawings of Leonardo da Vinci’s Anatomical Manuscript A will be on view in their entirety in the exhibition Leonardo da Vinci: The Mechanics of Man. Generously loaned from the Royal Collection by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II for presentation during the Vancouver 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games, this once-in-a-lifetime exhibition will be free to the public during the 17 days of the Olympic Games as the result of a partnership with the Province of British Columbia.

Comprised of a series of 18 sheets created during the winter of 1510, 16 of which have drawings on both sides, this celebrated group of exquisitely rendered compositions represents stunning achievements in both art and science.



http://www.canadianarchitect.com/issues/ISArticle.asp?aid=1000351464#
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  #432  
Old Posted Dec 17, 2009, 9:29 PM
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already known here but in the news now...

McDonald’s to open three Games outlets

Myth: Olympic athletes live on a strict diet of low-fat cuisine and avoid fast food at all costs.

Reality: Free McDonald’s food will be a hugely popular option for competitors staying at the Vancouver and Whistler athletes’ villages.

“Athletes use our menu in a balanced way,” McDonald’s regional vice-president Rob Chiasson said in an interview. “Our menu offers a wide variety of products to accommodate all nutritional needs.”

The worldwide Olympic sponsor will operate three new Olympic restaurants during the 2010 Games — at the two athletes’ villages and the media centre in Vancouver. Media will pay for their burgers but athletes and their support staff won’t.

Chiasson said the restaurants will offer the same choices as regular McDonald’s outlets, noting that usually sits well with many athletes.

“We have a picture of the Jamaican men’s [4x100] relay team eating lunch in our restaurant in Beijing before running [and winning] their event,” he said.

The free-food-for-athletes marketing strategy worked well for the restaurant chain at the Beijing Games, especially when superstar Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt told the media he ate Chicken McNuggets before setting a world record in the 100 metres.

Chiasson said that with less than two months to go before the Games begin, McDonald’s will ramp up an Olympic activation budget that will be as big as any used for previous Winter Games.

...

http://www.vancouversun.com/health/McDonald+open+three+Games+outlets/2349635/story.html
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  #433  
Old Posted Dec 17, 2009, 9:30 PM
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Wow Leonardo da Vinci AND McDonalds!
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  #434  
Old Posted Dec 17, 2009, 9:46 PM
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Olympic citizen journalists given home in Vancouver

VANCOUVER - A media centre for bloggers and cellphone videographers without official press credentials for the 2010 Winter Olympics will be open throughout the Games in the heart of Vancouver's Downtown Eastside neighbourhood.

W2 Culture and Media House, an updated heritage building across the street from the Woodward's redevelopment project, will provide fully wired editing suites and free wireless connection to the Internet (WiFi) for "citizen journalists" working with online media outlets from around the world as well as anyone else who wants to post video, photos and commentaries on their own homepages or on sites found on YouTube, Flickr, Facebook and MySpace.

VANOC, the city's Olympics organizing committee, set up media centres on the Vancouver waterfront for those who have exclusive rights to broadcast live in their own country and for a limited number of additional media outlets.

The B.C. government has put together a second media centre at Robson Square in downtown Vancouver for broadcast and print media that could not be accommodated in the official media centre. Both centres require journalists to register and receive appropriate credentials before using the facilities.

The social-media centre on West Hastings Street will be for those who cannot go into the Olympics-sanctioned media centres, Irwin Oostindie, executive director of W2 Community Media Arts, said in an interview. Even some athletes with blogs who may not have the appropriate press credentials could use the centre, he said.

"We'll pick up people who are unable to access those services but have a story to tell. They'll likely tend to be more prominent bloggers and independent journalists, independent columnists that want a bit more of the real story and are not so embedded with VANOC," Mr. Oostindie said.

The centre will promote the "democratization of storytelling" by providing a place for citizen journalists to work, he said. Citizen journalists are members of the public who produce their own content for media reports on events.

W2 Culture and Media House will operate in a similar fashion to a hotel business centre, with free space for journalists to come and go as they like or just to park with their laptops. A separate area with computers and editing software will be available for $25 a day, he said. The building can accommodate about 125 people at one time in the open area, where a daily press briefing will be held. Dedicated infrastructure to upload video and blogs will be available at 25 stations.

....

http://www.ctvolympics.ca/news-centre/newsid=22578.html
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  #435  
Old Posted Dec 17, 2009, 10:02 PM
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Vancouver is ready for its Olympic star turn

By LINDA BERGSTROM

The Chicago Tribune


Speaking of the Winter Olympics, you might wonder whether Vancouver, which hosts the Games from Feb. 12 to Feb. 28, will experience a same boom in its ski industry that Utah and Squaw Valley, Calif., have seen in years past.

That’s another reason why you may want to visit the scenic Canadian city before the Olympics come to town. You will avoid the crowds and also see Vancouver at its finest. Here’s why:

The city is spruced up. The first indication is the airport, which has been filled with murals and displays. In the city, construction season has finished, and Olympic banners have been hung. All for visitors.

The SkyTrain linking the airport to downtown is up and running. It’s clean, fast (about 25 minutes) and cheap (about $3). There are even roving attendants at the airport stop who will help you get tickets.

There is room at the inn. Come February, hotel availability will be nonexistent and/or prohibitively expensive. This fall, rooms at the majestic Fairmont Hotel Vancouver had rates as low as $158 per night for a weekend stay.

There’s a lot to see. Stanley Park has great views, totem poles, trees and restaurants. Even the seaplanes landing and cruise boats launching from the Pan Pacific hotel are a draw.

You can visit the Olympic venues. Whistler, which will have 28 events, including ski jumping and cross-country races, is a short, scenic train ride away.

...

http://www.star-telegram.com/living/story/1838505.html#tvg
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  #436  
Old Posted Dec 17, 2009, 11:06 PM
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Olympics’ Molson Canadian Hockey House slashes entry price to $99

BY BRUCE CONSTANTINEAU, VANCOUVER SUN DECEMBER 17, 2009

VANCOUVER — Molson Canadian Hockey House officials have slashed the entry price to the Olympic hockey pavilion from $500 for an all-you-can-eat-and-drink, all-day pass to $99 for a "Fan Zone" pass that lets you stay for half a day.

"We've always had this [price point] as part of our plan," VisionCo. president Jordan Bitove said in an interview. "There's a corporate market looking for an all-inclusive solution for their hospitality needs but we always planned to unveil a more affordable fan zone pass."

He said a "limited" number of half-day passes will be offered for $99 but did not say how many. The passes allow access to entertainment and food but only include two drinks. A beer is expected to cost $7.

VisionCo. is a partner with Hockey Canada and the International Ice Hockey Federation in the $15-million venue that will operate on the northeast shore of False Creek during the 2010 Games.

The $500-a-day price point raised a lot of eyebrows when it was announced in October but Bitove said at the time it was cheap when compared with events like the Super Bowl, Formula One and Ryder Cup.

He wouldn't reveal precise sales numbers so far but said they are "exactly on target" and noted corporate customers have already bought 24 of 27 $68,000 packages that include all-day access for eight people for all 17 days of the Games.

http://www.vancouversun.com/sports/2010w...e+slashes+entry+price/2352598/story.html
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  #437  
Old Posted Dec 18, 2009, 1:09 AM
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Group blocks Yonge Street to stop Olympic torch

680News staff
Dec 17, 2009 19:40:19 PM

Several hundred protesters have blocked Yonge Street south of Wellesley Street in an effort to oppose the Olympic games.

The group organizing the demonstration has called their actions the "Toronto Rally to Oppose the Torch."

According to the group's website, their message is "No Olympics on stolen Native land!" and they say, "The Olympics Torch is about colonial theft of indigenous land; corporate profit grabbing; ecological destruction, militarization and migrant exploitation."

Police are on scene to control the crowd.

The group has blocked the Olympic torch route twice since its journey to Vancouver came to Canada.

To avoid the protest, organizers were forced to put the torch into a van and drive the flame along the route to its next stop, the Hospital for Sick Children.
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  #438  
Old Posted Dec 18, 2009, 1:27 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Delirium View Post
Olympics’ Molson Canadian Hockey House slashes entry price to $99

BY BRUCE CONSTANTINEAU, VANCOUVER SUN DECEMBER 17, 2009

VANCOUVER — Molson Canadian Hockey House officials have slashed the entry price to the Olympic hockey pavilion from $500 for an all-you-can-eat-and-drink, all-day pass to $99 for a "Fan Zone" pass that lets you stay for half a day.

"We've always had this [price point] as part of our plan," VisionCo. president Jordan Bitove said in an interview. "There's a corporate market looking for an all-inclusive solution for their hospitality needs but we always planned to unveil a more affordable fan zone pass."

He said a "limited" number of half-day passes will be offered for $99 but did not say how many. The passes allow access to entertainment and food but only include two drinks. A beer is expected to cost $7.

VisionCo. is a partner with Hockey Canada and the International Ice Hockey Federation in the $15-million venue that will operate on the northeast shore of False Creek during the 2010 Games.

The $500-a-day price point raised a lot of eyebrows when it was announced in October but Bitove said at the time it was cheap when compared with events like the Super Bowl, Formula One and Ryder Cup.

He wouldn't reveal precise sales numbers so far but said they are "exactly on target" and noted corporate customers have already bought 24 of 27 $68,000 packages that include all-day access for eight people for all 17 days of the Games.

http://www.vancouversun.com/sports/2010w...e+slashes+entry+price/2352598/story.html
$99 is more appropriate, depending on the quality of food they'll be serving.
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  #439  
Old Posted Dec 18, 2009, 3:54 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by officedweller View Post
Group blocks Yonge Street to stop Olympic torch

680News staff
Dec 17, 2009 19:40:19 PM

Several hundred protesters have blocked Yonge Street south of Wellesley Street in an effort to oppose the Olympic games.

The group organizing the demonstration has called their actions the "Toronto Rally to Oppose the Torch."

According to the group's website, their message is "No Olympics on stolen Native land!" and they say, "The Olympics Torch is about colonial theft of indigenous land; corporate profit grabbing; ecological destruction, militarization and migrant exploitation."

Police are on scene to control the crowd.

The group has blocked the Olympic torch route twice since its journey to Vancouver came to Canada.

To avoid the protest, organizers were forced to put the torch into a van and drive the flame along the route to its next stop, the Hospital for Sick Children.
The torch made it to Nathan Phillips square after a reroute, about an hour behind schedule. Those damned protesters...I wouldn't be so angry if their reasons for protesting were less ridiculous, self-serving, and cynical. Shouldn't they be protesting on the streets of BC every day, if they are so angry about this society existing on "stolen native land"? I read the No2010 guys' website, and under the FAQs they suggest that any aboriginals that support the games are misguided and brainwashed. Yeah, tells you what line of logic these fools are coming from.
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  #440  
Old Posted Dec 18, 2009, 4:08 AM
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^ totally agree. these protestors just want to cause shit. there is no "stolen land".

check out the Four Host First Nations website: http://www.fourhostfirstnations.com

very impressive!
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