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The Olympic Museum
Read more like this: Switzerland Destinations

Sports Shrine by Lake Geneva

Olympic Museum

A panoramic wall consisting of 32 giant TV screens, connected like huge tiles, curves in a 180-degree arc around the Summer Games gallery of Lausanne's Olympic Museum. Playing continuously on this video kaleidoscope are great moments in modern Olympic history. On one section of the wall, multiple images of Abebe Bikila run barefoot in the dark through the streets of Rome to win the marathon in 1960; on another it's 1956 again and the great Russian distance runner, Vladimir Kuts (pronounced COOTS, thus the couplet, "Vladimir, Vladimir, Vladimir Kuts, nature's attempt at a machine in boots") pounds relentlessly to another medal. There is no narration but the images are backed by a dramatic Chariots of Fire-style musical score.

Approximately every 20 minutes, on an identical wall over in the Winter Gallery, Austrian Franz Klammer plummets down the mountain in his heart-stopping 1976 gold medal run at Innsbruck. The pictures are too numerous and too fast; too much to absorb at one time. You sink down on a cushioned stool, surrounded by the Games of the past. There's Oregon State's Dick Fosbury winning the high jump by going over the bar backwards, of all things; and now, in the center of the wall, that's Ohioan Dave Wottle coming from way behind in a funny little hat to win the 800 meters at the wire in Munich in 1972. Small-town American kids, a long way from home, beating the world.
 

It is this multiple image, black and white film-show that is the centerpiece and main goose bump provider in Lausanne's marvelous Olympic Museum. For mainstream sports fans it's a must-see, but even the casual Olympic watcher will consider the two or three hours needed for a fairly thorough museum browse as time well spent.


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Open only two years, the museum occupies a choice hillside site overlooking Lac Léman (Lake Geneva). Approach it from the lake, take the winding path (said to measure 1,363 Greek feet, the length of an Olympic stadium) that begins at the fountain, up the gentle slope, through the formal gardens dotted with sport-theme sculptures, and finally past the eight Greek columns flanking the museum entrance. (Among the sculptures, note the giant metal torso with "washboard" stomach entitled Citius, Altius, Fortius - faster, higher, stronger - and Olympia, a tight group of three bronze bicycle racers.)

Inside, the building's top three levels are connected by a wide stainless steel and glass ramp that spirals to a skylit dome. In the spiral's center is a black, blue and red Joan Miró sculpture.

Each visitor is issued an attractive plastic card with an Olympic logo on one side (mine featured the jagged Dolomites and the logo of the 1956 winter games at Cortina d'Ampezzo) and an electronic strip on the other. When inserted into the turnstiles, the card allows entry to the various exhibits.

The museum has been described as "interactive" and we had visions of flinging ourselves into a long jump pit or sliding down a luge run, but the only interactive items we saw were computer terminals which, in several languages, provide additional information about the exhibits and the Games. Under consideration is a "simulation room," where visitors will be able to better "appreciate the athletes' exploits by measuring their own performance against those of champions."

If not interactive, the presentation is definitely multimedia. Though there are many static displays, the best and most moving exhibits - especially the film panoramas - incorporate video, sophisticated lighting and music.

A temporary exhibition, recalling the opening and closing ceremonies of the 1992 Albertville winter games, sounded uninteresting but turned out to be a dazzler. Dreamlike, surreal figures danced and flew in an extraordinary show of music and light.

The main floor gallery, which retraces the history of the Olympic Movement, was interesting but not so exciting as what was to come later in the Winter and Summer Games galleries. Here is more prosaic "museum stuff": ancient Greek vases, a collection of Olympic torches, flags (great sculpture of the Olympic flag), and, ho hum, a life-size diorama of the office of Pierre de Coubertin, founder of the modern Games.

Even though the Olympic Museum displays some first-rate modern art, it is essentially still a collection of athletic memorabilia, mementos of the Games are everywhere; a shiny four-man bobsled hangs here, a varnished rowing shell there. And, of course, there is a substantial collection of things like the shoes Jessie Owens wore to win four gold medals in 1936 and lots of medals, old skis, hockey sticks and javelins.

One exhibition room is reserved for philately and numismatics and displays 12,000 stamps and 600 coins linked to the history of the Games. There is also a "donor's wall," inscribed with such names as Coca Cola and IBM, and a corner is devoted to the next summer games in Athens. 

But old stamps and Greek vases, even Baron de Coubertin and the wealthy men who support the Games, must take a back seat to the athletes and their performances. And no collection of skates, running shorts, basketballs or hockey pucks, can recall the great moments as well as film. It is the effective use of this medium that puts the Olympic Museum over the top. 

On our way out we took a last look at Citius, Altius, Fortius, that torso with the washboard belly, and considered the Olympic motto: "You who wish to excel, forge your body and soul to discover the best in yourself, always aim one degree higher than the goal you have set for yourself: faster, higher, stronger." Suitably inspired to aim that one degree higher, I decided to have an extra beer at lunch. 

The Olympic Museum, 1 Quai d'Ouchy, 1001 Lausanne, Switzerland

Tel. +41/21/ 621 65 11
Fax +41/21/621 65 12
www.olympic.org/uk/passion/museum/index_uk.asp

 
Opening hours
1 May to 30 September:
Everyday from 9 a.m. to 6pm
1 October to 30 April:
Tuesday to Sunday from 9am to 6pm
Closed on Mondays. Closed Dec. 25 and Jan. 1
Ticket prices range from CHF 9 to 14


 




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Gemütlichkeit: The Travel Letter for Germany, Austria, & Switzerland