Buzz Rules
To Infinity and Beyond
- Joined
- Feb 7, 2005
- Messages
- 13,848
Should World Cups and Olympics only be held respectfully in one permanent location from now on to save money and resources? 



Last edited:
I know countries/cities take great pride in hosting these events, but it does make sense from an economic standpoint. More than one former Olympic site has been left to rot after the games concluded. It’s a waste of money and physical resources.Should World Cups and Olympics only be held respectfully in one permanent location from now on to save money and resources?![]()
Portable and environmentally friendly stadiums could be a solution.I know countries/cities take great pride in hosting these events, but it does make sense from an economic standpoint. More than one former Olympic site has been left to rot after the games concluded. It’s a waste of money and physical resources.
That being said, I doubt that would ever happen. There would be too much pushback from places hoping to boost their own economies by hosting the event.
They would help, but there would still be a significant investment in infrastructure, and there are some things specific to the Olympics that couldn’t easily be made portable (thinking pools, bobsled and ski jump facilities, etc.). Soccer stadiums could more easily be adapted to a movable venue, but there would still be some site work and expense that couldn’t be eliminated.Portable and environmentally friendly stadiums could be a solution.
Or build the new facilities in places that they will be used later. A lot of the sites built for the Atlanta Olympics are now in use by area colleges. I went to GT and we had the aquatic center and some of the athlete dorms from the Olympics.No and I don't think a single permanent host is necessary either. What needs to happen is the Olympics need to use existing facilities much more frequently and not build new everything, or almost everything, for the games. Most large cities, especially if they have a D1 college, have most of the facilities necessary to put on the Olympics. Some facilities may need upgraded but then they can be used going forward.
There are options that sit between permanent site and what we have now.
The World Cup is different. Setting aside Qatar and, to an extent South Africa, most are in countries that already have existing stadiums that will continue to get used after the games. They may get new stadiums to modernize the facilities but they continue to get used. I also think few are building a bunch of temporary housing for athletes like the Olympics and the teams and fans stay in existing housing but I could be wrong there.
What strikes me is the only bid that made sense among those (England-Scotland-Ireland) has been withdrawn.Countries bidding to host WC 2030 or 2030 Winter Olympics:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/2030_FIFA_World_Cup
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/2030_Winter_Olympics
I question the money that is going to be spent by some of the bidding countries.
FIFA requires 9-12 stadiums for a WC. It’s meant to give more economic opportunities to different parts of the host country. The 2026 WC will have 48 teams completing all over North America. In theory you could do everything with 5 stadiums tbh.Both FIFA and the Olympics seem to have these idealistic view of sports and don't care about the economic realities of what they are asking coutries to spend. Until that changes, I really don't see how this problem gets resolved. Place like Brazil spent enormous amounts of money to host such events and end up with venues that have no future use and is left with significant ongoing debt while much of the country deals with crime/poverty. With all of the stories I read about crime in Brazil, it is never someplace I would go on vacation so the idea that hosting one of these events will magically increase tourism when it remains unsafe to travel there doesn't seem realistic.
I don't follow the World Cup, but isn't it all played at one venue/stadium? I have mostly lost interest in the Olympics over the years with the various cheating scandals swept under the rug as well as including those who are obviously pro athletes (i.e. basketball, hockey & golf come to mind, there are probably others). Golf has a clearly defined criteria for who is considered an amateur so I don't really follow why the Olympics ignores that. Olympics require multiple venues based on the particular sport. Clearly someplace like Qatar experienced higher costs due to the compressed timeframe to get it all done. Still seems like $228B is an exhorbitant amount of money for a stadium and infrastructure impovements. Unless some country has so much cash they don't know what to do with it, I don't see why hosting these events remains such a big priority for them.
The Olympics also keeps adding new sports which make the thing more complex. I think it would make way more sense to have fewer events and rotate between countries who already have the needed venues to hold down costs. Until that happens, I don't see much changing.
When the US hosted the World Cup in '94 it was held all over the country. The finals were at the Rose Bowl and I went to a couple of the pool play games (I saw the infamous Colombia own-goal in fact). Games were also played in Chicago, New York, Texas, Florida, even Minnesota.Both FIFA and the Olympics seem to have these idealistic view of sports and don't care about the economic realities of what they are asking coutries to spend. It is no longer 1950 and just the cost of security alone is probably more then it used to cost to host the entire event. Until that changes, I really don't see how this problem gets resolved. Place like Brazil spent enormous amounts of money to host such events and end up with venues that have no future use and is left with significant ongoing debt while much of the country deals with crime/poverty. With all of the stories I read about crime in Brazil, it is never someplace I would go on vacation so the idea that hosting one of these events will magically increase tourism when it remains unsafe to travel there doesn't seem realistic.
I don't follow the World Cup, but isn't it all played at one venue/stadium? I have mostly lost interest in the Olympics over the years with the various cheating scandals swept under the rug as well as including those who are obviously pro athletes (i.e. basketball, hockey & golf come to mind, there are probably others). Golf has a clearly defined criteria for who is considered an amateur so I don't really follow why the Olympics ignores that. Olympics require multiple venues based on the particular sport. Clearly someplace like Qatar experienced higher costs due to the compressed timeframe to get it all done. Still seems like $228B is an exhorbitant amount of money for a stadium and infrastructure impovements. Unless some country has so much cash they don't know what to do with it, I don't see why hosting these events remains such a big priority for them.
The Olympics also keeps adding new sports which make the thing more complex. I think it would make way more sense to have fewer events and rotate between countries who already have the needed venues to hold down costs. Until that happens, I don't see much changing.
I don't follow the World Cup, but isn't it all played at one venue/stadium?
Countries bidding to host WC 2030 or 2030 Winter Olympics: