El Dorado News-Times

Atlanta’s Olympic venues meet varying fates since 1996

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ATLANTA (AP) — Twenty years after the Olympics were held in Atlanta, some remnants of that improbable summer remain a highly visible part of the city's landscape, while others quickly faded away.

Centennial Olympic Park and Turner Field — known as Centennial Olympic Stadium in 1996 — were the greatest legacy of those games, though the latter faces an uncertain future after just 20 seasons as home of baseball's Atlanta Braves, who are moving to a new suburban stadium next year.

Other venues barely outlasted the extinguish­ing of the Olympic flame, while still more failed to live up to their intended purpose.

A look at Atlanta's Olympic facilities two decades later:

CENTENNIAL OLYMPIC STADIUM:

The 85,000-seat main stadium was site of athletics (Michael Johnson's world record, Carl Lewis' farewell) and both the opening and closing ceremonies (Muhammad Ali's poignant lighting of the torch). Afterward, the arena was converted into a 50,000-seat baseball park and renamed after the longtime owner of the Braves, Ted Turner. It hosted both the World Series and the All-Star Game during its early years, but the Braves have fallen on hard times and are moving to SunTrust Park in 2017. Georgia State is exploring the possibilit­y of another conversion, which would downsize Turner Field into a 30,000-seat football stadium.

GEORGIA DOME:

A divider transforme­d this 70,000-seat football stadium into two separate arenas — one the site of second Olympic Dream Team winning gold in men's basketball, the other where the Magnificen­t Seven captured America's first victory in women's team gymnastics. Just 25 years after its opening, the dome is slated for demolition after $1.4 billion Mercedes-Benz Stadium opens next door in 2017.

CENTENNIAL OLYMPIC PARK:

This was the hub of the games, a gathering spot for sponsor tents and nightly concerts. Tragedy struck midway through the Olympics when a deadly bombing ripped through the park, but it emerged afterward as a catalyst of downtown developmen­t, now surrounded by the hugely popular Georgia Aquarium, World of Coca-Cola, College Football Hall of Fame, National Center for Civil and Human Rights, and a giant Ferris wheel.

GEORGIA TECH AQUATIC CENTER:

Temporary seating was used during the Olympics, providing a 14,600-seat main pool for swimming, diving and synchroniz­ed swimming. There also was a 4,000-seat temporary pool for water polo. After the games, Georgia Tech enclosed the facility and reduced capacity to just under 2,000. This year, it hosted the NCAA swimming championsh­ips as well as a pre-Olympic camp for the U.S. swim team before it departed for the Rio Olympics.

GEORGIA WORLD CONGRESS CENTER:

One of the world's largest convention centers (and even more sprawling today after a post-Games expansion), it was divided into five separate arenas during the Olympics, reducing the need for wasteful new venues for fencing, handball, judo, table tennis, weightlift­ing and wrestling. That became a model for future Olympics.

ATLANTA-FULTON COUNTY STADIUM:

Site of baseball during the Olympics, the former home of the Atlanta Braves served out the 1996 season, then was imploded the following summer to make way for a parking lot serving adjacent Turner Field.

OMNI COLISEUM:

Just a week before Atlanta Stadium came down, this facility used for volleyball during the Olympics met the same fate. Philips Arena now occupies the site.

G E O R G I A INTERNATIO­NAL HORSE PARK:

Equestrian, modern pentathlon and the first Olympic mountain bike competitio­n were held at the park about 30 miles east of Atlanta. It remains an equestrian and events center, with horse and mountain bike trails plus an Arnold Palmerdesi­gned golf course open to the public.

STONE MOUNTAIN PARK ARCHERY CENTER AND VELODROME:

Temporary facilities for archery and track cycling came down shortly after the Olympics. The site is now part of a songbird and habitat trail.

STONE MOUNTAIN TENNIS CENTER:

A permanent tennis facility built in a corner of Stone Mountain Park quickly became a money loser and now sits idle, weeds growing through the outer courts and the scoreboard in disrepair.

SANFORD STADIUM

(Athens, Georgia): The home of the Georgia Bulldogs football team hosted soccer finals, including the U.S. memorably winning the first women's gold. The stadium known for its famous hedges (which were taken down during the Olympics and then re-planted) has been expanded to hold more than 92,000.

ALEXANDER MEMORIAL COLISEUM:

Site of boxing in 1996, Georgia Tech's basketball arena underwent a massive renovation that completely gutted the interior of the building. It reopened in 2012 as gleaming McCamish Pavilion.

HERNDON LAKE LANIER STADIUM:

Perhaps the saddest legacy of the games, this 15,000-seat stadium was used during the filming of the movie "We Are Marshall" but was abandoned after Morris Brown College ran into financial difficulti­es. Gutted by vandals, it is now covered in graffiti and piles of trash.

(Gainesvill­e, Georgia): This man-made lake still has its rowing facilities, which have been used for major competitio­ns over the last two decades. This year, it hosted an Olympic qualifier for Rio.

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