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Lillehammer Olympic Village : ウィキペディア英語版
Lillehammer Olympic Village
Lillehammer Olympic Village ((ノルウェー語:Lillehammer OL-landsby)) was an artificial village constructed in Lillehammer, Norway, to accommodate 2,300 athletes and leaders during the 1994 Winter Olympics, and subsequently a smaller number during the 1994 Winter Paralympics. The Hamar Olympic Subsite Village was in Hamar; part of Toneheim Folk High School, it was able to accommodate 500 athletes and leaders.
==Lillehammer==
The Lillehammer Olympic Village was built at Skårsetlia, northeast of the town center of Lillehammer. It was built on a property and had of real estate. This gave a capacity for 2,300 athletes and leaders from 67 nations. In addition, there was a service center, including a cafeteria which could serve 2,000 people simultaneously. There were security posts at the entrance to the village, with bus stops, parking and a reception further in. Heating was provided by electricity, solar power, gas and geothermal heat.〔LOOC (III): 76–79〕
Each team was allocated a common area after the size of the team. Common rooms varied from , all teams received a main leader room of , between one and three additional leader rooms, between one and three medical rooms, between one and four massage rooms, a storage room between , and a drying room between .〔
Construction started in 1992 and the first house was completed on 10 August. Average production per day was ; to get sufficient speed, several contractors with different prefabrication methods were selected. The village, consisting of wooden buildings, including parts in glue-laminated wood, was completed in December 1993 costing 250 million Norwegian krone (NOK). However, the reception building was made of aluminum modules, allowing it to be moved afterwards. During the games, it was rented by the Lillehammer Olympic Organizing Committee. The village consisted of a permanent part of 185 houses; of which 141 were sold privately after the games. Re-building and dismounting started in April 1994. The service center was afterwards converted to a cafeteria, senior center, a church and a nursery school. The rest of the buildings were mobile and sold to other parts of the country after the games. The temporary part was built on farmland which was taken into use as such from 1996.〔

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