SALT LAKE CITY — The Winter Olympics will make its grand return to Salt Lake City in 2034, the International Olympic Committee announced Wednesday, marking the success of Utah's decadeslong effort to preserve Olympic venues and retain public enthusiasm.
Local leaders have had their sights set on hosting again — and becoming part of a possible future rotation of winter host cities — even before Salt Lake City hosted its first Games in 2002. In the years since, continued use and upkeep of Olympic facilities not only boosted Salt Lake City's reputation as a winter sports destination but became the main selling point in its pitch to bring back the Games.
''There was always a thought of the Games happening again,'' said Tom Kelly, spokesperson for Salt Lake City's bid committee.
Utah's capital city was the lone contender the International Olympic Committee was considering hosting in 2034. In the decades since Salt Lake City first opened its nearby slopes to the world's top winter athletes, the pool of potential hosts has shrunk dramatically. The sporting spectacular is a notorious money pit, and climate change has curtailed the number of sites capable of hosting. Even though Salt Lake City got caught in a bribery scandal that nearly derailed the 2002 Winter Olympics, it worked its way back into the good graces of an Olympic committee increasingly reliant on passionate communities with existing infrastructure as its options dwindle.
Salt Lake City bid leaders boast that they've created one of the most compact layouts in Olympic history, with all venues within a one-hour drive of the athletes village on the University of Utah campus. The plan they presented Wednesday to the Olympic committee in Paris requires no new permanent construction, with all 13 venues already in place and each having played a role when the city first hosted.
These are the planned 2034 venues:
Park Place (Block 85)
For the first time, Olympic officials are bringing Big Air to the heart of Salt Lake City. Organizers plan to erect a massive skiing and snowboarding ramp in a downtown parking lot two blocks from Temple Square, a center of history and worship for members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.