Olympic Sliding Centre Innsbruck
The Olympic Sliding Centre Innsbruck is a venue for bobsleigh, luge and skeleton located in Igls, Austria. The most recent version of the track was completed in 1975 and is the first permanent, combination artificially refrigerated bobsleigh, luge, and skeleton track, serving as a model for other tracks of its kind worldwide. It hosted the bobsleigh, luge, and skeleton competitions for the 2012 Winter Youth Olympics.
History
In 1935, Igls hosted the two-man event of the world bobsleigh championships when the track ran from Römerstrasses to the Patscherkofel valley railroad station. Several fatal accidents at the finishing curve occurred during competition, causing temporarily closure of the track until safety measures were introduced. In 1960, Innsbruck was awarded the 1964 Winter Olympics which led to the construction of separate bobsleigh and luge tracks for the games. Track construction began in September 1961 and was officially completed in July 1963 following test runs of both tracks, including twenty injuries during the 1963 FIBT World Championships on the bobsleigh track. Prior to the start of the 1964 Winter Olympics, British luger Kazimierz Kay-Skrzypeski was killed in a training run on the luge course. When Denver, Colorado, in the United States withdrew in 1972 after being awarded the 1976 Winter Olympics two years earlier for financial reasons, the International Olympic Committee offered the games to 1976 runner-up Whistler, British Columbia in Canada, but Whistler declined in the wake of the provincial elections in 1972. As a result, the IOC gave the games to Innsbruck. Construction on a new, combined track was started in 1973 under the auspices of the International Bobsleigh and Tobogganing Federation and the International Luge Federation and completed the following year. The track was praised by the FIL during testing in 1975 and proved so successful that it fostered a commission with the FIBT and the FIL on construction of combination tracks in 1977 that continues to this day. The track added a restaurant and was extended in 1981. In 1990–1, the ladies start house at the fifth turn was renovated and the finishing stretch was extended in 1998. The track was part of the OlympiaWorld-Innsbruck in 2004, the same year a general refurbishment was done on the concrete shell. Today, it serves as a training facility for new bobsledders and skeleton racers. It hosted the bobsleigh, luge, and skeleton events for the 2012 Winter Youth Olympics.Statistics
The track has a vertical drop of 98.1 meters.The 1964 Winter Olympic bobsleigh track, designed by former bobsledder and luger Paul Aste, consisted of 14 turns with a total length of 1506.36 meters, a vertical drop of 138 meters, and a maximum grade of 14.04%.
Turn Number | Name | Translated name |
1. | Startkurve | "Start curve" |
2., 3. | Hohes S | "High S" curves |
4. | Stützenkurve | "Support curve" |
5. | Höcker | "Peak" curve |
6. | Fuchsloch | "Fox hole" |
7. | Hohle Gasses | "Hollow lane" |
8. | Schanze | "Dig" |
9. | Hexenkessel | "Witch's pot" |
10. - 11. | Nadelöhr | "Needle-eye" S curves |
12. | Burlepautz | |
13. | Weckauf | "Wake on" |
14. | Zielkurve | "Finish curve" |
The 1964 Winter Olympic luge track, designed by former bobsledder and luger Paul Aste, consisted of 18 turns with a total length of 1063.76 meters for men singles and a vertical drop of 113.20 meters, and a maximum grade of 18.18%. For women's singles and men's doubles, the length was 910.00 meters with a vertical drop of 86.27 meters
Turn Number | Name | Translated name |
1. | Startkurve | |
2., 3. | Labyrinth | Two turns in quick succession without a straight |
4. | Waldkurve | "Wood curve" |
5. | Stoßwand | "Impact wall" |
6. | Gletscherblick | "Glacier view" |
7. | Hängematte | "Hammock" |
8. | Wasserschlupf | "Water slip" |
9. | Promenade | "Promenade" |
10. | Fuchsloch | |
11. | Koflkehre | - |
12. | Schoß | "Shot" |
13. - 14. | Mausfalle | "Mouse case" |
15. | Olympiakurve | "Olympic curve" |
16. | Wassertrog | "Water trough" |
17. | Zielgerade | "Finish line curve" |
18. | Zielkurve |
Turn Number | Name | Reason named |
4., 5., 6. | Upper labyrinth | Three turns in quick succession without a straight |
7. | Kreisel | 270-degree Kreisel curve |
11., 12., 13. | Lower labyrinth | Three turns in quick succession without a straight |
Turns 1–3, 8-10, 14, and 15 have no names listed in the track diagram.
Sport | Record | Nation - athlete | Date | Time |
Bobsleigh two-woman | Start | - Kaillie Humphries & Heather Moyse | 22 January 2010 | 5.50 |
Bobsleigh two-woman | Track | - Shauna Rohbock & Michelle Rzepka | 22 January 2010 | 53.47 |
Luge - men's singles | Start | Johannes Ludwig - | 29 November 2009 | 3.865 |
Luge - men's singles | Track | David Möller - | 29 November 2008 | 48.533 |
Luge - women's singles | Start | Tatjana Hüfner - | 28 November 2009 | 2.003 |
Luge - women's singles | Track | Natalie Geisenberger - | 28 November 2009 | 39.569 |
Luge - men's doubles | Start | - Markus Schiegl & Tobias Schiegl | 29 November 2008 | 1.927 |
Luge - men's doubles | Track | - Patric Leitner & Alexander Resch | 28 November 2009 | 39.278 |
Skeleton - men | Track | Martins Dukurs - | 3 December 2011 | 52.69 |
Skeleton - woman | Start | Courtney Yamada - Amy Williams - | 12 December 2008 | 5.33 |
Skeleton - women | Track | Shelley Rudman - | 12 December 2008 | 54.65 |