New York City bid for the 2012 Summer Olympics

Bids for the
2012 (2012) Summer Olympics and Paralympics
Overview
Games of the XXX Olympiad
XIV Paralympic Games
Winner: London
Runner-up: Paris
Shortlist: Madrid · Moscow · New York City
Details
CityNew York City, USA
NOCU.S. Olympic Committee
Evaluation
IOC score7.5
Previous Games hosted
None
Decision
ResultEliminated in the 2nd round of voting
Scored fourth at 7.5, although it scored first in the "Accommodation" category,
sharing a 10 with Paris and London.

The New York City 2012 Olympic bid was one of the five short-listed bids for the 2012 Summer Olympics, ultimately won by London.

New York City's Olympic bid was managed by a private non-profit organization, NYC 2012, founded by Daniel L. Doctoroff, then the managing director of Oak Hill Capital Partners, a private equity firm.[1] Doctoroff thought of bringing the Olympic Games to New York after witnessing New York's international sports fans at a 1994 FIFA World Cup match in Giants Stadium. He then built a team to help craft a plan for staging the Games. Seven years later, Doctoroff resigned as President of NYC2012 to join the administration of Mayor Michael Bloomberg, but he continued to lead New York's Olympic Bid as Deputy Mayor for Economic Development and Rebuilding.

Two of the biggest projects proposed as part of the bid were the revival of the East River waterfront, including the construction of an Olympic Village across the river from the United Nations Headquarters and an aquatics center in Brooklyn, and the construction of West Side Stadium, which was supposed to have led to the comprehensive redevelopment of the Far West Side of Manhattan. Other projects that were part of the bid included a rowing course in Queens, a velodrome in the South Bronx, a marina along the coast of the Atlantic Ocean, an equestrian center on Staten Island, and the refurbishment of the historic 369th Regiment Armory in Harlem.

  1. ^ Levy, Nicole; Chiwaya, Nigel (August 16, 2016). "How NYC's Failed 2012 Olympic Bid Shaped the City We Live in Today". DNA info. Archived from the original on June 26, 2019. Retrieved June 26, 2019.