Sochi's
shocking secret: It's absolutely beautiful
WHILE
the world continues to hone in on security issues and half-finished
facilities, here's something you might like to know about Winter
Olympics host city Sochi.
4
February, 2014
It's
actually incredibly beautiful, especially up in the mountains, where
the bulk of Australia's athletes will compete.
Sochi
is Russia's southernmost and warmest city, and the unsnowy surrounds
of the coastal Olympic venues have left an unflattering impression.
Just
50km inland, the landscape is entirely different. This is where the
bulk of the $50 billion budget has been spent, and it shows. Almost
$10 billion was spent on road and rail access to the existing
mountain town of Krasnaya Polyana, which means "Red Glade"
in Russian.
The
train route and highway end a couple of kilometres down the road at
the entirely new $2.6 billion resort Rosa Khutor.
Styled
like a 19th century German spa town, Rosa Khutor is a little
lego/gingerbread house-like. But the buses run on time, everything
works and the riverside walk is alive with joggers and tourists.
Rosa
Khutor occupies every inch of available space in the narrow river
valley. Source: NewsComAu
Rosa
Khutor might not be the real Russia, or even the real Sochi, but it
is really pleasant. And this is just one of many towns which have
sprung up along the new highway.
Russian
president Vladimir Putin has attracted criticism for everything from
the environmental impacts of the Sochi Olympics to the manner in
which building contracts were dished out to some of his favourite
billionaires.
Corruption,
nepotism and environmental vandalism have become virtual bywords for
these Olympics, along with the threat of terrorism.
Even
these men in black can manage a smile. Source: NewsComAu
For
all this, one thing is often forgotten. The largest, snowiest nation
on Earth now has a winter playground to rival the Alps.
As
many as 35 new ski lifts have been built in the ski resorts dotted
around Krasnaya Polyana, all of them swift and modern and often
audacious in the way they head directly up near-vertical slopes.
While
the city of Sochi is a landscape of green rolling hills, the Caucasus
mountains are a terrain of majestic alpine spires and magnificent
birch forests.
Amid
this landscape, about halfway up the mountain at Rosa Khutor, is the
athletes' village. No such facility has ever been constructed in such
a grand setting.
To
stand there on a windless blue Russian winter day is to stand in one
of the most beautiful landscapes on Earth.
And
it’s not just the mountains which are beautiful. Source: NewsComAu
Australian
moguls skier Taylah O'Neill was so taken with the athletes' village
that she described it as like a scene out of The Wizard of Oz.
"It's
like nowhere I've ever been before," O'Neill said. "It kind
of reminded me of the yellow brick road because you just kept
following the road up and up and it kept taking you to more places."
The
Australian Chef de Mission Ian Chesterman said "It's a glorious
setting, all brand new, of course, sitting high on a ridge and
looking out over a magnificent valley, with pristine, fresh snow."
The
athletes' village is situated directly adjacent to the Rosa Khutor
Extreme Park, where snowboarding and freestyle skiing events will be
conducted.
Many
of the courses funnel down into one huge amphitheatre for spectators
- a design feature which should make for a fantastic atmosphere.
Mountain
crews were hard at work on the courses yesterday, pushing mounds of
snow around to construct jumps and other course features on the ski
cross and slopestyle courses.
Pushing
white powder is perfectly acceptable behaviour in these
parts. Source: NewsComAu
Australian
snowboarder Torah
Bright yesterday attacked the course designers,
declaring them below the standard of "the best in the business".
Bright
may be right, just as other critics of these Olympics almost
certainly have valid points.
But
here's another truth. The setting for mountain events at these
Olympics could be the most spectacular ever seen at any Summer or
Winter Games.
Amid
the relentless negativity, not everything in Sochi is a disaster. Far
from it, in fact.
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