Updated at 10 a.m. ET
The International Olympic Committee
has awarded Beijing the 2022 Winter Games
With the selection, the Chinese city will become the first to host both winter and summer games. Beijing hosted the 2008 Summer Games.
With a vote of 44 to 40, Beijing beat out Almaty, the biggest city in Kazakhstan.
In a press release
The bidding process for these Olympic Games was not without controversy.
As NPR's Tom Goldman told Morning Edition, Munich and Stockholm dropped out of the bidding process because they were afraid of the costs.
Eventually, Tom says, the IOC went with the safe choice. Almaty is, of course, lesser known, but it offered real snow.
Beijing will have to rely on man-made snow, and some of the mountain venues in Beijing are 100 miles away. But, Tom adds, it will save on some costs by reusing some of the same venues it built for the 2008 games: The so-called
Bird's Nest Stadium
NPR's Anthony Kuhn was recently in a village near the city of Zhangjiakou, some 120 miles northwest of Beijing, where most of the downhill events will take place.
"I'm walking down the main street of the village that is supposed to be a transport hub, after they construct a high-speed railroad from Beijing," Anthony says. "Right now, there's not much to look at though, it's just a main street, with simple, low-slung farm houses on either side. Most people just sit around by the side of the road, when they're not in the fields farming their cabbages."
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