Atlanta’s Olympic venues meet varying fates since ’96
ATLANTA — 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.
Here’s 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 4,000seat 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.
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.
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 Stadium
Perhaps the saddest legacy of the games, this 15,000seat stadium was used during
the filming of the movie “We Are Marshall” but was abandoned after Morris Brown College ran into financial difficulties.
The stadium was gutted by vandals and is now covered in graffiti and piles of trash.
Lake Lanier
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.
Wolf Creek Shooting Complex
Some facilities remain at this suburban venue now known as the Tom Lowe Shooting Grounds, but it no longer holds major international events.
Atlanta Beach
Located south of the city, this venue was site of the first Olympic beach volleyball tournament. It was renamed Clayton County International Park, with the main stadium now used for concerts and other events though the park still includes several beach volleyball courts, as well as a water park, lake and biking trails.
Golden Park
The 5,000-seat stadium, about a two-hour drive from Atlanta, was used for the first Olympic softball competition. It served for years as home to minor league baseball, but the last of those teams, the Columbus Catfish, left after the 2008 season.
The stadium remains but no longer has a major tenant.
Other venues
Georgia’s Stegeman Coliseum (volleyball preliminaries), Georgia State’s GSU Sports Arena (badminton), Clark-Atlanta’s Panther Stadium (field hockey) and Morehouse’s Forbes Arena (basketball preliminaries) are still used by their respective colleges. In fact, Panther Stadium now holds the athletics track used during the Olympics.