Bids for the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics

Bids were due by 28 November 2013, the candidates cities were selected on 5 December 2014 and Lausanne was elected host city on 31 July 2015.[1][2]

Bids for the
2020 (2020) Winter Youth Olympics
Overview
III Winter Youth Olympic Games
Winner: Lausanne
Runner-up: Brașov
Details
CommitteeIOC
Map
Missing location of the bidding cities.

Location of the bidding cities
Important dates
First Bid28 November 2013
Second bid12 December 2013
Shortlist5 December 2014
Decision31 July 2015
Decision
WinnerLausanne (71 votes)
Runner-upBrașov (10 votes)

Votes results

2020 Winter Youth Olympics bidding results
City Nation Votes
Lausanne  Switzerland 71
Brașov Romania 10

Bidding calendar

  • 2013
    • 6 June: IOC Invites NOCs to submit applications for 2020 Winter Youth Olympics [1]
    • 28 November: Deadline to Submit Bids to IOC
    • 12 December: Signature of YOG Candidature Procedure
  • 2014
    • 14-16 January: IOC Workshop for 2020 YOG Applicant Cities in Lausanne
    • 17 June: Submission of YOG Application Files
    • 16-28 August: Observer Program at 2014 Summer Youth Olympics in Nanjing
    • 5 December: Candidates Cities Two Cities in Lausanne
  • 2015
    • June 2015: Video conferences between Candidate Cities and IOC Evaluation Commission
    • 31 July: Election of the host city. Lausanne received 71 votes out of 81.

Candidates cities

Two cities have submitted their application to the International Olympic Committee by the 28 November 2013 deadline.[3]

Lausanne, Switzerland

Lausanne confirmed their bid for the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics on 12 July 2013. Lausanne is where the International Olympic Committee is headquartered and is considered to be the Olympic capital.[4] On 12 December 2013, Lausanne was signed Youth Olympic Game Candidature Procedure.

Brașov, Romania

Brașov has officially submitted their bid for the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics in November 2013. In early 2013, Brașov hosted the 2013 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival.[5] On 12 December 2013, Brașov was signed Youth Olympic Game Candidature Procedure.[6]

Other cities which had considered a bid

Europe

Sofia bid to host the 1992 and 1994 Winter Olympics, but lost to Albertville and Lillehammer respectively. Sofia was going to bid for the 2016 Winter Youth Olympics but did not submit a bid citing that they did not fill the requirements set by the IOC. The Bulgarian Olympic Committee is interested in the city potentially bidding for the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics.[7]

North America

Lake Placid hosted the 1932 and 1980 Winter Olympics. Lake Placid was interested in bidding for the 2016 Winter Youth Olympics but opted to bid for 2020 instead.[8] Lake Placid hosted the sixth IOC Athlete Career Program Forum on 8–11 November 2012.[9]

References

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