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St. Louis Plans To Bid Again on 2020 U.S. Olympic Swimming Trials

The St. Louis Sports Commission has confirmed that the city will indeed be bidding on the 2020 Olympic swimming trials, reports St. Louis Today.

St. Louis was one of three finalists for the 2016 trials, which was awarded instead to Omaha, Nebraska for the third year in a row.  Commission President Frank Viverito says, “From what I understand we finished second to Omaha in the last bid process. The setup in Omaha mirrors what we have. The only difference is an arena opposed to a dome. If they’re looking for the same setup in a more spacious, versatile venue, then St. Louis would be perfect.”

St. Louis’ bid will offer several different seating capacities resulting in as many as 200,000 fans being able to be physically present watching the trials.  Two Olympic pools, one in a dome and one potentially in the convention space accessible from the dome, would require installation.  St. Louis Today reports that the city’s Fire Department and engineering experts “have conducted tests that have determined the floor of the facility can hold the weight of the pools, about 660,000 gallons of water each. That’s more than five million pounds of water per pool.”

The bid is due this spring, with a decision possibly being announced before the 2016 trials.  “It’s on such a grand scale and gets so much national attention,” Viverito said. “It hits all the targets. It’s men’s and women’s competition. It’s a dream event for us. It’s the biggest Olympic event we could produce.”

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Gina Rhinestone
9 years ago

Few things hurt more than the French being right.

In Nov 2013 France put out a travel warning for the area between the airport & the city centre . Crime is abundant on public streets mainly due to drug deals & especially so at night. Visitors were informed that the airport mini shuttle direct to the city was safe.

Nth St Louis alderman Antonio French said “The French fears are uninformed & unfair “.

Today ,there is a precautionary Boil Water alert for North St Louis indicating water infrastructure deficiencies.

Spending local money a 90% white sport in (central ) St Louis is certainly going to create waves.

SWIMFAN1
Reply to  Gina Rhinestone
9 years ago

Unfortunately this is quite accurate. For current situations…

But 2020 is 5 years away, and a city can change drastically in that time, use New York in the 1990’s for example. All it takes is a great Mayor and people in a joint task force who know what they are doing.

Maybe the city can change, maybe not. All I want is Trials at a new venue in 2020!

BaldingEagle
9 years ago

660,000 gallons? That’s a pretty dubious number. A nearby 50m x 25y x 7-8 foot depth pool has 735,000 gallons. FINA-class pools should be 50m x 25m x 10″. I’m going to assume approximately 1M or more gallons. So, this estimate underestimates the weight of the pool by some 240,000lbs (~8lb/gallon).

Reply to  BaldingEagle
9 years ago

Yes but the water they use at Trials is a special, lightweight water to create less drag and allow for faster times.

aswimfan
Reply to  BaldingEagle
9 years ago

660,000 gallons is about right.

a FINA class pool is 50mx20mx2m depth (on average).
Which is 2,500 cubic metres.
Which is 2,500,000 litres (1 cubic metre = 1,000 litre).

Now, 1 litre = 0,264 US gallons

so, 2,500,000 litre = 2,500,000 x 0,264 gallons = around 660,400 gallons.

But don’t trust me, I only studied engineering.

BaldingEagle
Reply to  aswimfan
9 years ago

A FINA-class pool is 50mx25mx3m (10 lanes wide, 10 feet deep). USAS swimming specifically chose Omaha because they could promise a 3m depth, while other arenas couldn’t.

My pool is 53m (bulkheads) x 25y (22.82m) x 7-8 feet, and 735,000 gallons. Smaller and shallower. But don’t trust me, I’m only the facility director.

Perhaps that 660k figure is for the warm-up pool on the floor of a convention center, as at Omaha. No need for that to be 2m deep or 10 lanes wide.

Reply to  BaldingEagle
9 years ago

The warmup tank is far bigger than the competition tank. Both are 10L wide, but the warmup tank has an extra 4 lanes that are 25m…

Teamwiess
9 years ago

Omaha has been a wonderful host the last two trials and I am sure it will be again in 2016. That being said, as a spectator, I would like to see the 2020 awarded to a different location, if for nothing more than diversity sake.

TimeforaChange
9 years ago

After 2008, 2012, 2016 in Omaha…please anyplace but Omaha again. I’ve toyed with taking a vacation to watch trials, but am waiting for someplace that’s more enticing. 2004 was in Long Beach, which would be a great vacation. But Omaha? Please no….

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Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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