Medicine Hat News

Calgary officially ends 2026 Olympic bid

- DONNA SPENCER

Calgary must now come to grips with how to modernize its aging sports facilities after rejecting a bid to host the 2026 Winter Olympics and Paralympic Games.

City council hammered the final nail in the coffin of a 2026 Games bid with a unanimous vote to scuttle it Monday.

The decision comes on the heels of a non-binding plebiscite, in which 56 per cent of those who went to the polls voted ‘no’ to bidding for the games.

Calgary was the host city of the 1988 Winter Olympics. The venues from those games, the majority of which are still used by recreation­al and high-performanc­e athletes three decades later, were the foundation of another potential bid.

They’re also a driving force behind Canada’s performanc­es at Winter Olympic and Paralympic Games. Canada won a record 29 Olympic medals, including 11 gold, and another 28 Paralympic medals in Pyeongchan­g, South Korea, earlier this year.

But without the almost $2.2 billion in provincial and federal money tied to Calgary pursuing and winning a bid for 2026, the task of bringing the city’s major sports facilities into this century en masse is a mammoth, expensive undertakin­g.

McMahon Stadium, almost 60 years old, was the site of the opening and closing ceremonies in 1988 and is the home of the CFL’s Stampeders. The Saddledome, built in 1983 for both the NHL’s Flames and the Winter Games, is 35 years old.

While a new stadium and new NHL arena weren’t in the proposed draft plan for 2026, upgrades to both were.

An indoor sport fieldhouse, which has been on Calgary’s books as a recreation­al need for over a decade, was also in the 2026 plan.

“I was at the football game yesterday,” Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi said Monday. “I continue to think that McMahon is a great place to watch a football game once you’re in your seat. Getting to your seat, kind of miserable.

“This had been our plan to really re-do McMahon and make that a beautiful venue for future generation­s. There’s seven other venues within the city of Calgary that need that kind of rejuvenati­on.”

Nenshi estimated between $600 million and $700 million would be needed to both build a fieldhouse and match the investment into the ‘88 legacies proposed in a 2026 bid.

“It’s going to be important to really start on that strategy now,” the mayor said. “It’s also important to recognize that we are in an environmen­t where we are more capital-constraine­d than we ever have been since I’ve been in this job, meaning that council and myself and citizens are going to have to temper our expectatio­ns.”

There was discussion inside and outside of chambers Monday as to whether the provincial and federal government­s would still contribute money to Calgary’s sport infrastruc­ture needs, now that a Winter Olympics is off the table.

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