Calgary

Another Olympics may squeeze 'Crown jewel' mountain trail venue

The "Crown jewel" of cross-country skiing and biathlon venues may be ready for Olympic-level athletes but officials are feeling squeezed at the thought of hosting such a large event.

Canmore Nordic Centre is tight on space but has world-class ski and biathlon runs

Mike Norton and Beckie Scott spend a lot of time at the Canmore Nordic Centre, which may be part of a bid for the Olympics. (Paul Karchut/CBC)

The "Crown jewel" of cross-country skiing and biathlon venues may be ready for Olympic-level athletes but officials are feeling squeezed at the thought of hosting such a large event.

It's a question of having enough space.

The Canmore Nordic Centre, tucked between the scenic Mount Rundle and the Bow River, hosts international level competitions often, despite opening three decades ago for the Calgary 1988 Winter Olympics.

"In all fairness, we could host the Olympic races tomorrow. We've got the snow. Our trails are very technically challenging and they're wide enough, they're hilly enough," said Mike Norton, who works for WinSport Canada.

"Our biggest change and challenge is purely just space and not only space but flat space. We essentially are on the side of the mountain."

Norton has been the chief of competition for the last four World Cups held at the nordic centre. In the mid-2000s, the venue received an almost complete rebuild, with $25.5 million in provincial funding, for such sporting events.

A preliminary report by the Calgary Bid Exploration Committee said the venue would need roughly $7.4 million in upgrades to bring it up to Olympics standards. This would go toward base area development, utility upgrades and to prepare a transit site.

The venue has its own plans, as well, for example, for improving snowmaking.

The main concern for an Olympics would be to accommodate all the logistical needs. A venue must have space for large broadcast teams.

Nathan Smith competed on Canada's biathlon team in World Cup races at Canmore Nordic Centre. (Marie Birkl/AFP/Getty Images)

The TV components at the Pyeongchang Winter Games' nordic venue took up about 5,000 square metres, just under the size of a competition-level soccer field. It's unclear where such a space could be found at the Canmore Nordic Centre.

"The one thing we don't have going for us is we're quite small as a venue," Norton said.

"A lot of Olympic venues are built from scratch and you can kind of build it to fit the Olympics. We have to fit the Olympics into what we have."

The Nordic Centre's space is about half the width of the nordic combined site built specifically for the 2010 Vancouver Winter Games, he said.

Canmore Nordic Centre is popular for skiers. (CBC)

The site would also need housing for people who fly in from around the world. The athlete's village would likely go on city-owned land by Stoneworks Creek, Mayor John Borrowman said. It's earmarked for affordable housing, which he hopes the athlete's village would turn into.

The site would need flood mitigation, which Borrowman said funding to build Olympics infrastructure could help the town afford.

"That's a big carrot for us," he said.

The town would likely set up parking lots outside of the mountains and shuttle people in using buses to cut down on traffic.

Olympic cross-country skier Beckie Scott has made her home in Canmore, and hopes the town can make room for the games.

"Canmore is busy, there's no question, and we've seen that busyness increase yearly," the now-retired athlete said.

"There would have to be adjustments and there would have to be accommodations made but that's typical for every city or every community that hosts an Olympic Games."

It took more than two years of courtroom wrangling and foot-dragging, but cross-country skier Beckie Scott was eventually upgraded from bronze to silver to gold at the 2002 Winter Games in Salt Lake City. (Chris Bolin/Associated Press)

'Incredibly beautiful'

Canmore itself was dramatically changed following the 1988 Olympics. It was a small town with a struggling economy as its main industry, a coal mine, had shut down. The Nordic Centre is actually built on part of the old minesite, with a lodge on a spot known as "the mine scar."

"I feel like it's looked as a little bit of a Crown jewel," Scott said.

"Athletes love coming to Canmore, you know. First of all, it's an incredibly beautiful, spectacularly scenic venue to race at. But the venue itself is world class."

The trails are considered to be very well maintained. (Paul Karchut/CBC)

The town has a seat on the Calgary's Olympic bid corporation, and has toyed with the idea of a plebiscite to gauge the community's interest in hosting the Olympics.

There's been talk of limiting spectators, and the venue has submitted a bid for $12 million in provincial funding for improved snowmaking equipment.

Fans cheer and wave flags during the opening ceremony of the Winter Olympic Games in February 1988 in Calgary. (Jonathan Utz/AFP/Getty Images)

"It's still just frozen water," Norton said, but the new equipment can make snow much faster in the event the area is hit with one of its notorious Chinook warm winter weather waves.

They're also looking at improving ventilation in rooms where athletes wax their skis and boards, which may cost about $2 million, he said.

'Beauty of this bid'

They would also have to make less hilly and slightly less challenging trails, for some Paralympic events for the seated skiers. The existing trail also needs a couple kilometres added so athletes can do larger loops for longer races.

"I think that's the beauty of this bid. Many of the venues and facilities that were used in '88 are still being used now," Scott said. "That's why I think Calgary and Canmore differentiate themselves as a potential host city."

With around 800,000 visits to the nordic centre a year, the venue will stay busy regardless of whether there is an Olympic bid or not.

  • Hear more from the Calgary Eyeopener's visit to the Canmore Nordic Centre:


With files from Paul Karchut and the Calgary Eyeopener.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Rachel Ward

Journalist

Rachel Ward is an investigative journalist with The Fifth Estate. You can reach her with questions or story ideas at [email protected].