Pyeongchang County
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| Pyeongchang 평창 |
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| — County — | |||
| Korean transcription(s) | |||
| - Hangul | 평창군 | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| - Hanja | 平昌郡 | ||
| - Revised Romanization | Pyeongchang-gun | ||
| - McCune-Reischauer | P'yŏngch'ang-gun | ||
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| Country | |||
| Region | Gwandong | ||
| Administrative divisions | 1 eup, 7 myeon | ||
| Area | |||
| - Total | 1,463.65 km2 (565.1 sq mi) | ||
| Population (2004) | |||
| - Total | 46,531 | ||
| - Density | 21/km2 (54.4/sq mi) | ||
| - Dialect | Gangwon | ||
Pyeongchang County (Pyeongchang-gun) is a county in Gangwon province, South Korea and the third largest county in the country. It is located in the Taebaek Mountains region, and is home to a number of Buddhist temples, including Woljeongsa. The county is around 180 km to the east of Seoul, the capital of South Korea.
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[edit] Geography
The altitude of Pyeongchang is wide range. Its best known place, Daegwallyeong-myeon has 700 m to 800 m above sea level, with some areas over 1,000 m high.[1] Daegwallyeong-myeon has a humid continental climate climate (Koppen climate classification Dfb) with warm, humid summers and long, cold winters.
[edit] Olympic Games aspirations
Pyeongchang was the candidate city of South Korea for the organization of the XXII Olympic Winter Games, the 2014 Winter Olympics. This was the second attempt of this city (after 2010).
On June 22, 2006, the number of candidates was narrowed to three; Pyeongchang competed against Salzburg, Austria and Sochi, Russia.[2] In the final round of voting on July 4, 2007, Salzburg was eliminated first, with Sochi ultimately selected over Pyeongchang as host city of the 2014 Olympic Winter Games by just 4 votes.
Previously Pyeongchang bid to be the host of the 2010 Winter Olympics. It won the first round of votes with 51 against Vancouver's 40 and Salzburg's 16, but lost out 53 to 56 in the final ballot to Vancouver. It was the closest vote by the IOC since Sydney, Australia beat Beijing by 2 votes to host the 2000 Summer Olympics.
[edit] Olympic venues and Dream Program
Despite PyeongChang's losses, the region is going ahead with plans to build venues for a future Olympics; officials have all but confirmed that they will bid for 2018.[3] Hotels, a world-class ski resort named Alpensia is currently under construction, and a ski jump tower (though not yet finished) has been raised to its full height and has already become an iconic structure in PyeongChang, giving it a feel of a Winter Olympic town. An Olympic Stadium lies at the bottom of the hill in the early stages of construction. For the first time in Asia, a test event for the IBU World Cup biathlon was staged in PyeongChang in February 2008.[4]
The region has also followed through with its 2008 “Dream Program”, a legacy of its 2010 bid. It has mounted its fifth edition of the sports and cultural program which involved 123 participants from 31 countries who were invited because they live where there is no snowfall and have no opportunity to participate in winter sports.[4]
[edit] Administrative Divisions
- Pyeongchang-eup : County seat
- Bangnim-myeon
- Bongpyeong-myeon
- Daegwallyeong-myeon : The center of winter sports that hosted the 2009 Biathlon World Championships
- Daehwa-myeon
- Jinbu-myeon
- Mitan-myeon
- Yongpyeong-myeon
[edit] Gallery
[edit] See also
- YongPyong Ski Resort : A ski resort in Daegwallyeong-myeon
[edit] References
[edit] External links
[edit] General
[edit] Olympics-related
- 2014 PyeongChang — official site of the city's Olympic bid
- PyeongChang 2014 candidature files
- Government website of the Gangwon province (in English)
- GamesBids.com — information on bids for the hosting of the Olympic Games
- Gangwon Province goes all out to host 2014 Winter Games — from Korea.net
- CNN News on results of bid
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