A graveyard has been established in what was once part of the Olympic Sports Complex in Sarajevo for the 1984 Winter Olympics.
Zetra Olympic Hall was constructed specifically for the 1984 Winter Olympics, hosted in Sarajevo, and was completed in 1982. Its first major event was the 1983 World Junior Speed Skating Championships. It was described as an "ultramodern, angular edifice"[3] with a copper roof. The indoor venue hosted ice hockey and figure skating events, as well as the last closing ceremony held in an indoor place until Vancouver 2010.[4][5][6]
From 1984 to 1991, Zetra remained in service as a venue for ice sports. It served as the venue for several international speed skating events, and several speed skating world records were broken here.
Zetra Stadium as a staging area prior to reconstruction
Destruction
The arena suffered substantial damage from shelling, bombing and fire by the Serb forces on Monday, May 25, 1992 during the Bosnian War.[7] The interior of the structure, such as the basements and main hall, were put into service as a morgue,[8][9] storage space for medication and supplies, and a staging area for UN equipment.[10][11] The wooden seats from the venue were used as material for coffins for civilians killed in the war.[12][13]
Reconstruction
After the war, it was discovered that though the building was badly damaged, the foundation was secure. Although the original blueprints were never recovered, in September 1997, reconstruction on the venue, facilitated by the SFOR, began. The International Olympic Committee donated $US 11.5 million to the project,[10] which cost an estimated DM 32 million (€ 16.4 million).[8] The reconstruction was completed in 1999.
Zetra hosted the Balkans Stability Pact Summit in July 1999.[14] It is currently in service as a sporting arena.[4] It is also used for music concerts, fairs and conferences. Sometimes, parts of the building are rented for other purposes (e.g. for the elections 2014, it was used as the Main Counting Center and election material storage space). The hall also contains a small museum about the 1984 Winter Olympics as well as a gym, billiard hall, bowling alley, pistol range, two cafes and other sports related content such as headquarters for various clubs and associations.[15]
El Rumbero Family of Gipsy Kings - February 26, 2000
DJ BoBo - April 1, 2000 (opening act: Erato, concert organized as part of the Open Hearts Sarajevo project promoting cultural exchange and tolerance in Bosnia-Herzegovina[16])
^"Olympics Features: Sarajevo Olympic Hall renamed after Juan Antonio Samaranch". www.sportsfeatures.com. Retrieved 28 October 2017.
^"Olympic complex Zetra - Papa u Sarajevu". www.papa.ba. Retrieved 28 October 2017.
^"Now Bring On The Torch" Bob Ottum, Sports Illustrated, March 14, 1983
^ a b"ZOI84 - Zetra - Bjelašnica - Igman". www.zoi84.ba. Retrieved 28 October 2017.
^"A little touch of Heaven" B.J. Phillips, Time, February 27, 1984
^1984 Winter Olympics official report. pp. 71-2, 87-88, 105-8.
^"The Killing Ground" William Oscar Johnson, Sports Illustrated, February 14, 1994
^ a b"Zetra returns to the future" David Taylor, SFOR Informer #57, March 17, 1999
^"1984: Sarajevo" Bonnie DeSimone, New York Times, February 5, 2006
^ a b"Sarajevo 2010? Collateral Damage" Sports Illustrated, April 9, 1999
^"Guns Now, Butter Later" James L. Graff, Time, July 20, 1992
^"TV SPORTS; Goodwill Games Headed for Bosnia?" Richard Sandomir, New York Times, July 7, 1999
^"Sarajevo's Olympic Seats Are Now Coffin Boards" Mark Milstein, London Observer news service, August 5, 1993
^Balkans Stability Pact Summit David Taylor, SFOR Informer, July 28, 1999
^Roberts, Patrick (14 January 2011). "Side Order: In Sarajevo, a small museum with an Olympian message". The Washington Post. Retrieved 28 February 2011.
^DJ BoBo - 01. 04. 2000. - Zetra, Sarajevo
^"Đuro, Štuke, Skroz, Zoster i Defence u Zetri". Retrieved 28 October 2017.
External links
Media related to Olympic Hall Juan Antonio Samaranch at Wikimedia Commons