Venues of the 1980 Summer Olympics
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Venues_of_the_1980_Summer_Olympics an entity of type: Area108497294
For the 1980 Summer Olympics, a total of twenty-eight sports venues were used. The first venue used for the Games was built in 1923. With the creation of the Spartakiad in Moscow in 1928, more venues were constructed. Central Lenin Stadium Grand Arena was built in 1956 for that year's versions of the Spartkiad. A plan in 1971 to construct more sports venues by 1990 was initiated, but accelerated in 1974 when Moscow was awarded the 1980 Games. The new venues to be used for the Games were completed in 1979. During the Games themselves at the permanent road cycling venue, the first ever constructed, the largest margin of victory was recorded in the individual road race cycling event since 1928. The Grand Arena hosted the football final that was played in a rainstorm for the third straight Oly
rdf:langString
Спортивные сооружения летних Олимпийских игр 1980 — спортивные и прочие здания, возведенные или реконструированные специально к Летней Олимпиаде 1980 года в Москве, Ленинграде, Киеве, Минске и Таллине.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Venues of the 1980 Summer Olympics
rdf:langString
Объекты летних Олимпийских игр 1980
xsd:integer
29649312
xsd:integer
1071787987
rdf:langString
For the 1980 Summer Olympics, a total of twenty-eight sports venues were used. The first venue used for the Games was built in 1923. With the creation of the Spartakiad in Moscow in 1928, more venues were constructed. Central Lenin Stadium Grand Arena was built in 1956 for that year's versions of the Spartkiad. A plan in 1971 to construct more sports venues by 1990 was initiated, but accelerated in 1974 when Moscow was awarded the 1980 Games. The new venues to be used for the Games were completed in 1979. During the Games themselves at the permanent road cycling venue, the first ever constructed, the largest margin of victory was recorded in the individual road race cycling event since 1928. The Grand Arena hosted the football final that was played in a rainstorm for the third straight Olympics. After the 1991 break of the Soviet Union, the venues in Kiev, Minsk, and Tallinn would be located in Ukraine, Belarus, and Estonia, respectively. Luzhniki Stadium, formerly Grand Arena, continues to be used, and it was affected by the Luzhniki disaster in 1982. The stadium served as host for the IAAF World Championships in Athletics in 2013. Another venue, the Moscow Canoeing and Rowing Basin, served as host to the ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in 2014. In December 2010, Russia was awarded the 2018 FIFA World Cup with Luzhniki Stadium and Dynamo Stadium proposed as venues for those events.
rdf:langString
Спортивные сооружения летних Олимпийских игр 1980 — спортивные и прочие здания, возведенные или реконструированные специально к Летней Олимпиаде 1980 года в Москве, Ленинграде, Киеве, Минске и Таллине. В 1975—1980 годах в рамках подготовки к проведению Олимпийских игр в соответствии с генеральным планом развития Москвы (а также Ленинграда, Киева, Минска и Таллина), были построены и реконструированы порядка 20 спортивных и других сооружений для проведения Олимпиады. Среди них можно выделить спортивный комплекс «Олимпийский» на проспекте Мира, Центральный стадион имени В. И. Ленина (сейчас — стадион «Лужники»), АСК-3 телецентра «Останкино», аэропорт Шереметьево-2 (сейчас — терминал F аэропорта Шереметьево), стадион имени Кирова в Ленинграде, Республиканский стадион в Киеве, стадион «Динамо» в Минске, Таллинская телебашня, Олимпийский центр парусного спорта в Таллине. В Таллине проходили все олимпийские соревнования по парусному спорту в рамках Игр 1980 года.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
19356