Canada Olympic Park ski jumps to be dismantled

With the conclusion of the 2018 Pyeongchang Olympic Winter Games, the organization that oversees Canada Olympic Park (COP) in Calgary says it’s going ahead with plans to decommission and dismantle two ski jumps at the hill.
Officials with WinSport said the two jumps — situated on either side of the iconic 90-metre tower — are well past their life span and are too expensive to operate.
The organization’s vice-president of sport operations, Bernie Asbell, said infrastructure was “failing miserably” and would require a full rebuild to be viable for Canadian athletes.
He added that the only jump still in regular use at COP is considered a “starter” ramp.
“For any serious jumping, the athletes actually have to travel, whether it’s to the United States for one of the jumps down there or out to Callaghan Valley in Whistler [B.C.],” Asbell said.
READ MORE: Ski jumps kept open at Canada Olympic Park thanks to cash injection
In 2015, the Canadian Olympic Foundation offered $225,000 over three years to keep the facilities open for training purposes leading up to the Pyeongchang Winter Games.
Now that the Games are complete, the jumps will remain open for the summer training cycle with closure expected at the end of October. Asbell could not offer a timeline for when the jumps would be fully dismantled.
“Economically, these are very expensive operations to handle for us,” he said. “They cost on average about $500,000 to operate the jumps up there. With the volume of athletes to be perfectly frank, we just can’t afford to do that on an ongoing basis.”
WinSport said the main 90-metre tower would remain untouched. It hasn’t been used as a ski jump since 1990 but continues to serve the park as the starting point of its zipline.
Canada only has two ski jump complexes. A second was constructed in Whistler, B.C., for the 2010 Winter Olympics.
© 2018 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
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