Friday, March 13, 2020

2020 Tokyo Summer Olympics Fast Facts

(CNN)Here’s a look at the 2020 Summer Olympics to be held in Tokyo. The games are scheduled to take place from July 24 to August 9. The Paralympics are scheduled to take place August 25 to September 6.

    Tokyo to host 2020 Olympic games

This is the second time the Olympics will be held in Tokyo, which previously hosted the Games in 1964. Tokyo led an unsuccessful bid to host the 2016 Olympics.
    Invitations to the games were sent to countries, states and territories represented by 206 IOC National Olympic Committees and to the IOC Refugee Olympic Team.
    As of February 2020, the World Health Organization is providing advisement to the IOC and Tokyo 2020 regarding the coronavirus and any consequential travel restrictions.

    Design and Construction

      Olympic athletes will sleep on these recyclable beds

    The Japanese government originally selected British-Iraqi architect Zaha Hadid to design Tokyo’s new National Stadium, though the project was later given to architect Kengo Kuma following high-profile criticisms and spiraling costs.
    Kuma sourced more than 70,000 cubic feet of timber from each of the country’s 47 prefectures for the stadium. “We wanted to create something that captures the people’s thoughts on the environment or the Earth at the time,” Kuma told CNN in an interview in June 2019.

    Timeline

    May 23, 2012 – Istanbul, Madrid and Tokyo are announced as the three finalists to host the 2020 Olympics.
    September 7, 2013 – The winning city, Tokyo, is announced in Buenos Aires.
    May 7, 2014 – NBC agrees to pay $7.7 billion to broadcast the Olympics through the 2032 Summer Games. The 2032 Olympics will be the 23rd to be broadcast by the network.
    August 3, 2016 – The International Olympic Committee (IOC) adds five new sports to the games: skateboarding, karate, surfing, sports climbing and baseball/softball.
    April 2017-March 2019 – The Tokyo 2020 Organizing Committee launches its “Everyone’s Medal” campaign, calling on citizens to donate devices that could be stripped of their metals for both the Olympics and Paralympics. More than 6 million used cellphones, or around 79,000 tons of used cellphones and other small electronic devices, are collected.
    February 28, 2018 – The mascots for the Olympic and Paralympic games are announced. According to organizers, the mascots are futuristic superhero creatures with “opposite personalities” but who “respect each other and are very good friends.”
    July 21, 2018 – The names of the Olympic and Paralympic mascots are revealed. Miraitowa, pronounced “miray-towa,” is the blue and white checked Olympic mascot. The name combines the Japanese words mirai, meaning future, and towa, meaning eternity. Someity, pronounced “soh-may-tee,” is the pink and white Paralympics mascot. Someity is named after the cherry blossom variety Someiyoshino, and the English phrase “so mighty.”
    August 7, 2018 – The Tokyo 2020 Olympic committee says it will use facial recognition to improve safety and make security lines more efficient for participants — a priority because high temperatures are expected. All accredited individuals, including athletes, officials, staff and press, will have their facial images stored in a database and matched upon entry. NEC Corporation is providing the software.
    July 24, 2019 – The newly designed medals are presented. They have a pebble-like appearance and measure 8.5 centimeters in diameter. All medals will be produced from gold, silver and bronze (in this case, copper and zinc) stripped from donated cellphones and other electronics.
    December 4, 2019 – According to a Greenpeace report, high-level radiation hot spots can be detected at a sports complex in Japan’s northeastern Fukushima prefecture, where the Olympics torch relay will begin on March 26, 2020. In response to the report, Japan’s environment ministry says it conducted further decontamination. Radiation monitoring at the stadium will also be enhanced.
    December 15, 2019 – The stadium that will host the opening and closing ceremonies at the Olympics and Paralympics is inaugurated. The 68,000-seat stadium, designed by architect Kengo Kuma, cost 157 billion yen ($1.4 billion).
      March 12, 2020 – The lighting ceremony takes place in Olympia, Greece. Beginning March 26, 2020, the Torch Relay will travel to all 47 prefectures in Japan over 121 days.

        10 athletes to keep an eye on in 2020

      Original Article : HERE ;



      from AllAbout https://allabout.pw/2020-tokyo-summer-olympics-fast-facts/

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