Host city | Zurich, Switzerland |
---|---|
Opening | 6 March 2029 |
Closing | 17 March 2029 |
Summer | |
Winter | |
The 2029 Special Olympics World Winter Games or XIII Special Olympics World Winter Games and commonly known as Switzerland 2029, is a planned international multi-sport event. It will be the 13th Special Olympics International Winter Games. They are scheduled to be held from 6 to 17 March 2029 in the cantons of Graubünden and Zurich, Switzerland. [1] The sporting part will be held entirely in the canton of Graubünden, and the opening ceremony is scheduled to take place in Zurich.
The application was prepared by Special Olympics Switzerland in partnership with seven public partners (Switzerland, the canton of Grisons, municipalities of Vaz/Obervaz and Arosa, and the cities Chur, Zürich and Zürich. [2] The University of Applied Sciences of the Grisons was also involved in the preparation.
On 18 and 19 June 2021, Switzerland was awarded the event by the Special Olympics. [3] The condition was that public funding had to be available by 30 September 2022; this was achieved. [4] The contract was awarded at the same time as the 2025 Special Olympics World Winter Games was awarded to Turin.
The opening ceremony is to take place on March 6, 2029, in the Letzigrund Stadium in Zurich, with the closing ceremony in Chur supported by the Host Town Program throughout Switzerland. [2] [4] This offers sporting, cultural and entertainment activities, a social exchange with the local population and lived inclusion. For this purpose, the delegations will be assigned to the cantons in the days before the games according to possibilities; 23 of them will be guests in the twelve districts of the canton of Zurich and twelve districts of the city of Zurich, for example. For this purpose, each Host Town Committee will develop a concept based on free accommodation, food and transport for the international guests. [4] The Canton of Zurich expects around 6,100 overnight stays for the Host Town Program and the opening ceremony, around 10,000 visitors for the opening ceremony and around 2,000 participants at the meetings, receptions and congresses. [4]
Around 2,500 athletes from 110 nations are expected to take part in the games. [2] According to the funding decision, 650 coaches are also expected, making the World Games the second largest multi-sport event in the world after the Olympic Games. [4]
The games are intended to enable universities and technical colleges to plan and carry out scientific projects on inclusion. [4]
The Pre-Games are expected to take place in Chur from March 13 to 18, 2028. They are also the National Games of SOSWI and the test event for the WWG 2029. Over 800 athletes and coaches will take part in the sports planned for the WWG 2029 over six days. International delegations, primarily from Europe, are also expected. The competitions are to be held in the competition venues in Graubünden that are also planned for the World Games. In addition to the competitions, experience with accommodation and logistics is to be gained. The opening and closing ceremonies are to take place in Chur. [4]
An important goal is the implementation of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities in Switzerland. It is planned that the partners of the World Games - from the host cities to the sponsors and contractors - will set an example in a charter and begin with concrete measures, such as creating jobs in the primary labour market. Around 30 people are involved in the drafting of the charter. They are to form an inclusion advisory board that will have an advisory function, but also monitor compliance with the charter in the organization of the World Games. The charter is to be presented in 2023. [2] As part of the candidacy for the Special Olympics World Winter Games 2029, a basic study was prepared to improve inclusion in sport, housing and the working world in Switzerland. [5]
The following nine sports will be represented: [2]
The board of the organization responsible for holding the games is preparing to start its operational activities at the beginning of 2024. The full board is composed of seven people. The president is Bruno Barth, the managing director of Special Olympics Switzerland. The office of vice president is held by the FDP politician and president of the World Games Association Urs Marti, who was very committed to awarding the games to Graubünden. [6] He will remain in office as mayor of Chur until the end of 2024. The two board members Luana Bergamin and Stefan Frey come from the board of trustees of Special Olympics Switzerland. Lea Sandoz-Mey is committed to inclusion: as part of her high school diploma thesis, she founded the Inclusion 360 association shortly before the turn of the millennium and started a project in Zimbabwe in collaboration with the local Sunshine Project. [7] The board also includes Hans-Willy Brockes, founder and managing director of the ESB Marketing Network with more than 550 partners. He is very well known and well connected in European sports sponsorship. By the end of 2023, one more person with cognitive impairment will be admitted to the Presidium. [2]
Beat Ritschard was appointed Secretary General. [2]
The total budget is 38 million Swiss francs. [4] Around three quarters of this will be financed by public bodies. [4]
In the summer of 2023, the two chambers of the Swiss Federal Assembly approved 28.6 million Swiss francs for major sporting events of international importance for the years 2025 to 2029, of which 9.5 million francs are earmarked for the Special Olympics World Winter Games 2029. [8] The other public partners of Special Olympics Switzerland had already pledged 19.1 million Swiss francs for the games at an earlier date, subject to a positive decision by the Federal Assembly. [2] Of this sum, 1.8 million francs will come from the canton of Zurich's charitable fund, formerly known as the lottery fund. [9] In Chur, voters approved a loan of 4.25 million francs for the hosting of the games by 7026 votes to 4155. This corresponds to a yes vote share of 62.84 percent. [10]
The public funding of the games is thus secured. As soon as the text of the vote is available, the formal commitment can be obtained from Special Olympics International and an implementation agreement can be drawn up. [2]
The logo was announced to be developed by the Nyon-based agency Twist by the end of 2023. Workshops for this began in 2023, with members of the Special Olympics Athletes Commission and employees of Twist's Studio Intégratif also participating. [2]
The mountain biker Nino Schurter is an ambassador for the games. [11] He is an Olympic champion (2016), ten-time world champion and eight-time winner of the UCI overall World Cup in cross country.
The Grisons or Graubünden, more formally the Canton of the Grisons or the Canton of Graubünden, is one of the twenty-six cantons of Switzerland. It has eleven districts, and its capital is Chur. The German name of the canton, Graubünden, translates as the "Grey Leagues", referring to the canton's origin in three local alliances, the Three Leagues. The other native names also refer to the Grey League: Grischùn in Sutsilvan, Grischun in the other forms of Romansh, and Grigioni in Italian. Rhaetia is the Latin name for the area. The Alpine ibex is the canton's heraldic symbol.
Chur is the capital and largest town of the Swiss canton of the Grisons and lies in the Grisonian Rhine Valley, where the Rhine turns towards the north, in the northern part of the canton. The city, on the right bank of the Rhine, is reputedly the oldest town in Switzerland.
The Rhaetian Railway, abbreviated RhB, is a Swiss transport company that owns the largest network of all private railway operators in Switzerland. Headquartered in Chur, the RhB operates all the railway lines of the Swiss canton of Grisons, except for the line from Sargans to the cantonal capital, Chur, which are operated by Swiss Federal Railways (SBB CFF FFS), as well as the line from Disentis/Mustér to the Oberalp Pass and further on to Andermatt, Uri, which is operated by Matterhorn Gotthard Bahn (MGB). Inaugurated in 1888 and expanded from 1896 onwards in various sections, the RhB network is located almost entirely within Grisons, with one station across the Italian border at Tirano.
Thalwil is a municipality and town in the district of Horgen in the canton of Zürich in Switzerland. The municipality includes two parts: Thalwil and Gattikon.
Parpan was a municipality in the district Plessur of the canton of Graubünden in Switzerland. On 1 January 2010 the municipalities of Malix and Parpan merged into Churwalden.
Arosa is a town and a municipality in the Plessur Region in the canton of Graubünden in Switzerland. It is both a summer and a winter tourist resort.
Churwalden is a municipality in the Plessur Region in the canton of Graubünden in Switzerland. It incorporates the former municipalities of Malix and Parpan.
Lenzerheide is a mountain resort in the canton of Graubünden, Switzerland at the foot of the Parpaner Rothorn. The village lies in the municipality Vaz/Obervaz in the district of Albula, sub-district Alvaschein.
Vaz/Obervaz is a municipality in the Albula Region in the canton of Graubünden in Switzerland.
Langwies is a former municipality in the district of Plessur in the canton of Graubünden in Switzerland. On 1 January 2013 the former municipalities of Langwies, Calfreisen, Castiel, Lüen, Molinis, Peist and St. Peter-Pagig merged into the municipality of Arosa.
Nino Schurter is a Swiss cross-country cyclist who races for the Scott–Sram MTB Racing Team.
Carl Rüedi was a Swiss pulmonologist and at his lifetime one of the best-known physicians in Graubünden.
The Rhaetian Railway Ge 6/6 II is a class of heavy metre gauge electric locomotives operated by the Rhaetian Railway (RhB), which is the main railway network in the Canton of Graubünden, Switzerland.
Landquart railway station is a major railway station in the municipality of Landquart, in the Swiss canton of Grisons. It is an intermediate stop on the Swiss Federal Railways Chur–Rorschach line and the junction of the Landquart–Davos Platz and Landquart–Thusis lines of the Rhaetian Railway. It is served by long-distance, local, and regional trains.
Chur railway station serves the town of Chur, capital of the canton of Graubünden, Switzerland. Opened in 1858, it is the most important railway junction in Graubünden.
Gaudenz Canova was a Swiss socialist from Graubünden (Grisons).
The Gründjitobel Viaduct is a single track reinforced concrete railway bridge, spanning the Gründjitobelbach near Langwies, in the Canton of Graubünden, Switzerland.
Litzirüti is a small village near Langwies, in the municipality of Arosa, canton of Graubünden, Switzerland.
The Chur–Arosa railway line, also called the Arosabahn, Arosalinie, Aroserbahn or Aroserlinie, is a Swiss metre-gauge railway line, which is owned and operated by the Rhaetian Railway. It was built in 1914 by the Chur-Arosa-Bahn to connect the Grisons capital, Chur, with the spa town of Arosa. Since 1942, it has been integrated into the network of the Rhaetian Railway. The name of the former company is still used as a name for the line.
The Castielertobel Viaduct was a single track railway bridge spanning the Castielertobelbach, and linking the municipalities of Castiel and Calfreisen, in the Canton of Graubünden, Switzerland. It was built between 1913 and 1914 for the Chur–Arosa railway, and was owned and used by the Rhaetian Railway.