Javascript must be enabled to continue!
A Retrospective Analysis: 1996 Atlanta Summer Olympics and Lessons for Future Olympic Cities
View through CrossRef
This paper examines the rationale of the 1996 Summer Olympics bid of Atlanta and provides a retrospective analysis of the short- and long-term impacts of the Olympic Games. Olympics provided a means to facilitate the primacy of downtown Atlanta and this new strategy was partially successful mainly because of other external factors. The elites of downtown Atlanta seized the opportunity presented by a potential Olympic hosting in Atlanta to make promises and implement a vision that revitalizes certain downtown areas. Atlanta’s Olympic strategy gave positive results in the short-run, however did not help to increase the primacy of downtown Atlanta in the long term due to short-term focused strategies, prioritizing regional issues and shifting focus of business elites to regional growth. Atlanta’s Olympic planning practice mostly benefited the business interests while the desires and needs of the residents mostly disregarded, mainly because of the privately-lead planning initiatives. Atlanta Olympic planning practice showed that privatization of the Olympic planning results in limited effects in urban transformation. This paper concludes that the Olympics is not a “one-fits-all approach” for host cities, thus the outcomes differ from city to city mainly because of the different objectives, politics, and culture of each city.
Disiplinlerarasi Akademik Turizm Dergisi
Title: A Retrospective Analysis: 1996 Atlanta Summer Olympics and Lessons for Future Olympic Cities
Description:
This paper examines the rationale of the 1996 Summer Olympics bid of Atlanta and provides a retrospective analysis of the short- and long-term impacts of the Olympic Games.
Olympics provided a means to facilitate the primacy of downtown Atlanta and this new strategy was partially successful mainly because of other external factors.
The elites of downtown Atlanta seized the opportunity presented by a potential Olympic hosting in Atlanta to make promises and implement a vision that revitalizes certain downtown areas.
Atlanta’s Olympic strategy gave positive results in the short-run, however did not help to increase the primacy of downtown Atlanta in the long term due to short-term focused strategies, prioritizing regional issues and shifting focus of business elites to regional growth.
Atlanta’s Olympic planning practice mostly benefited the business interests while the desires and needs of the residents mostly disregarded, mainly because of the privately-lead planning initiatives.
Atlanta Olympic planning practice showed that privatization of the Olympic planning results in limited effects in urban transformation.
This paper concludes that the Olympics is not a “one-fits-all approach” for host cities, thus the outcomes differ from city to city mainly because of the different objectives, politics, and culture of each city.
Related Results
The New Agenda 2020+5 and the Future Challenges for the Olympic Movement
The New Agenda 2020+5 and the Future Challenges for the Olympic Movement
In March 2021, the Session of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) has approved a new strategic roadmap, Olympic Agenda 2020+5, consisting of 15 recommendations. The title, Ol...
Relationship between a Country’s Economy and Gold Medals in Tokyo 2020 Summer Olympics and Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics
Relationship between a Country’s Economy and Gold Medals in Tokyo 2020 Summer Olympics and Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics
My objective is to find how strong the correlation between economic factors of a country and the amount of gold medals won in the 2020 Summer and 2022 Winter Olympics. The economic...
Features of sports careers of women’s Olympic wrestling champions
Features of sports careers of women’s Olympic wrestling champions
Purpose: to identify the features of the sports career of Olympic champions in women's wrestling. Material and Methods. The main materials for the study were personal indicators of...
Smokeless tobacco Olympics: the US Tobacco Company, the IOC and the 1980 Lake Placid Olympic Winter Games
Smokeless tobacco Olympics: the US Tobacco Company, the IOC and the 1980 Lake Placid Olympic Winter Games
Throughout much of the 20th century, cigarette manufacturers have sponsored sporting events and used sports figures in advertising and marketing their products. The United States T...
Do You Want Sustainable Olympics? Environment, Disaster, Gender, and the 2020 Tokyo Olympics
Do You Want Sustainable Olympics? Environment, Disaster, Gender, and the 2020 Tokyo Olympics
The slogans of the 2020 Tokyo Olympics were “symbol of resilience from the Great East Japan Earthquake” and “Compact Olympics”. The Olympics were also expected to demonstrate “gend...
Framing Winter Olympics: A Content Analysis of Sochi Winter Olympics (2014) and Beijing Winter Olympics (2022)
Framing Winter Olympics: A Content Analysis of Sochi Winter Olympics (2014) and Beijing Winter Olympics (2022)
The frame analysis of Olympics-related news is quite popular, yet few studies do comparative studies of two Olympics hosted by ideologically similar countries. To fill this gap in ...
Olympic Movement Based Pencak Silat Training Model Block and Random Methods
Olympic Movement Based Pencak Silat Training Model Block and Random Methods
The crisis in value education in sport is increasingly evident, with many athletes prioritizing winning over the application of Olympic values. The paradigm shift from merely pursu...
Olympic Education – history, theory, practice
Olympic Education – history, theory, practice
This anthology is dedicated as a commemorative book for Antonin Rychtecky on behalf of his 75th birthday in 2020. It compiles the proceedings of the 4th Willbald Gebhardt Olympic S...

