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Learning From The Games

Learning From The Games
©IOC/John Huet

22/02/2010

The Olympic Games are a complex undertaking that will present unique challenges to each city and country that bids to host them. In order to help cities face up to these challenges, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) has created a knowledge resource called Olympic Games Knowledge Management (OGKM), which allows future host cities to draw on the knowledge and experience of previous Games hosts. If used wisely, the different tools available to the Games organisers should allow them to considerably streamline their planning and approach to the Games.

Bid Phase

The transfer of knowledge process begins during the bid phase, where applicant and candidate cities are able to access the wealth of knowledge contained within the OGKM programme, attend an information seminar of several days with experts from the IOC and current Organising Committees, as well as participate in the Observers Programme during the edition of the Games that falls during the bid phase. For the cities bidding for Games in 2018, they will participate in the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Winter Games Observers Programme.

Living It

There is no substitute to actually gaining hands-on experience and seeing the reality of organising a Games. This is why the IOC has implemented a multi-level programme that allows future organisers to experience the reality of the Games in action. Future organisers are invited to participate in either the official Observers Programme of a Games, where they are guided through different operational areas of the Games by the people that are actually running them, or on the secondee programme, which sees personnel sent to work for extended periods of time with the current Organising Committee of the Games, so that they can understand the operational intricacies of the Games. In addition, the IOC organises a debriefing of each edition of the Games, where the last Organising Committee shares its experiences and knowledge with those that are still working to put on the Games.

The Knowledge

Organisers also have the option of accessing a large amount of written and visual knowledge linked to Games organisation. The OGKM extranet allows bid cities and organising committees to access thousands of documents and videos produced by previous organisers, as well as Technical Manuals produced by IOC experts in numerous areas connected to the Games. This knowledge resource is invaluable to future organisers and grows with each passing edition, allowing it to stay abreast with the evolutions of the Games.

VANCOUVER 2010

Vancouver and Whistler will host the XXI Olympic Winter Games from 12 to 28 February 2010 and the 2010 Paralympic Winter Games from 12 to 21 March 2010. The seven winter Olympic sports that will be on show in Vancouver are luge, skiing, skating, ice hockey, biathlon, bobsleigh and curling.

Find out about the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Torch Relay Presenting Partners

Discover the best photos of London 2012

  • 4th Olympic Gold for Bradley Wiggins

    London – 1 August 2012: In the space of less than a month, Bradley Wiggins won the Tour de France, then became Olympic time trial champion in front of a home crowd. Here he poses with his gold medal, holding aloft the British flag, with the pride of winning of his fourth gold medal at three Olympic Games, but his very first on the road.

  • Individual time trial podium

    London – 1 August 2012: Great Britain’s Bradley Wiggins (gold), flanked by Germany’s Tony Martin (silver) and his fellow countryman Chris Froome (bronze) on the podium for the men’s road time trial, in front of Hampton Court Palace in Richmond-Upon-Thames, Greater London. Wiggins won this event to take his fourth Olympic gold medal, but the first on the road... only a few days after completing the Tour de France on the Champs Elysées wearing the yellow jersey.

  • Bradley Wiggins unforgettable win

    London – 1 August 2012: untouchable in the time trial, crowned Olympic champion for the fourth time in his career, but the first time on the road, Great Britain’s Bradley Wiggins triumphant before his home crowd after winning with a 42-second lead over Germany’s Tony Martin at the end of the 44km race. He raised his arms and continued in the clamour to Hampton Court Palace where he was awarded his gold medal.

  • Bradley Wiggins untouchable on the road

    London – 1 August 2012: On the track, Great Britain’s Bradley Wiggins is a three-time Olympic gold medallist in the individual and team pursuit, and six-time world champion. On the road, he had just won the Tour de France. Supported by a host of people, he broadly dominated the individual time trial over the 44km route in the South West of London, finishing in a time of 50:39.54, some 42 seconds ahead of Germany’s Tony Martin to win his fourth title and his seventh medal in three Olympic Games.

  • Wrestling: Ghasem Rezaei was crowned Olympic champion in the 96kg Greco-Roman event

    London - 7 August 2012: Iran’s Ghasem Gholamreza Rezaei (in red) faces Russia’s Rustam Totrov in the final of the Greco-Roman wrestling 96kg category at the ExCeL Arena. Rezaei won 2-0 (2-0, 1-0), taking one of Iran’s three gold medals in wrestling at the London 2012 Olympic Games.

  • Wrestling: Ghasem Rezaei's euphoria at his victory

    London - 7 August 2012: Iran’s Ghasem Gholamreza Rezaei is knocked over by his coach on the mat at the ExCel Arena after his 2-0 (2-0, 1-0) victory in the final of the Greco-Roman wrestling 96kg category against Russia’s Rustam Totrov. Rezaei took one of Iran’s three gold medals in wrestling at the London 2012 Olympic Games.

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