An Olympic center at the University of Utah? What that means

Olympic and Paralympic Cauldron Plaza is pictured at the University of Utah Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City on May 28, 2025. A new Olympic center intended to be part of a global research network is in the works for the University of Utah.

Olympic and Paralympic Cauldron Plaza is pictured at the University of Utah Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City on May 28, 2025. A new Olympic center intended to be part of a global research network is in the works for the University of Utah. (Kristin Murphy, Deseret News)


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • The University of Utah plans an Olympic Center for Societal Impact, focusing on research.
  • The center, endorsed by university entities, awaits final state approval next month.
  • The IOC will assess the center's application for recognition within its global network.

SALT LAKE CITY — A new Olympic center intended to be part of a global research network is in the works for the University of Utah.

What's being called the Olympic Center for Societal Impact is being pitched as a research hub, focused on the impacts of hosting a major sporting event like Utah's 2034 Winter Games in broad areas like the economy, climate change, sustainability, athlete health and ethics.

The proposal from the Kem C. Gardner Policy Institute and other campus entities was recently endorsed by both the University of Utah's Faculty Senate and Board of Trustees, and is headed to the Utah Board of Higher Education for final state approval, likely next month.

But it's the Switzerland-based International Olympic Committee that decides whether a center can join the network of academic research and studies centers around the world that have been adding to the "home of Olympic knowledge," since the 1980s.

Currently, there are 85 centers in 28 countries recognized by the IOC. In the United States, just three universities have Olympic centers recognized by the IOC: Arizona State University, the University of Oregon and the United States Sports University in Alabama.

Utah's Organizing Committee for the 2034 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games, listed as an "external partner" for the university center, set up the initial video call between the university and the IOC about six months ago to discuss what it will take to gain recognition.

"It was encouraging," said Natalie Gochnour, associate dean of the university's David Eccles School of Business and director of the policy institute, which has done numerous studies about the economic impact of another Winter Games in Utah.

Gochnour, who will co-direct the new center with John Lin, scientific director of the Wilkes Center for Climate Science & Policy and a professor of atmospheric sciences, said the campus has plenty to contribute.

"This is all part of a broader effort at the University of Utah to create societal impact. In sports, we have a lot to offer, as an Olympic city, as a member of the Big 12, the winter sports connections that are here," she said, also citing sports medicine and other programs.

In 2034, the university is also set to house athletes and host the Opening and Closing ceremonies at Rice-Eccles Stadium for the Olympics and Paralympics that follow for athletes with disabilities, just as it did for the 2002 Winter Games.

What the IOC says about a university Olympic center

The IOC acknowledged in a statement to the Deseret News that "discussions are taking place regarding the potential establishment of an Olympic Studies and Research Center at the University of Utah," noting it is "an initiative driven at university level."

Such centers "are not formally accredited by the IOC, but are recognized by the IOC Olympic Studies Center as centers actively engaged in Olympic studies," the statement said, describing the work of the IOC center as coordinating the global academic network.

The formal application the university must submit will be expected to outline the new center's activities, areas of expertise and institutional support and will be "assessed against established guidelines to ensure alignment with the objectives of the network," according to the IOC statement.

It said the "IOC values the continued development of quality academic engagement with Olympic studies globally, including in the United States, where there is already a strong and active academic community in this field, supported by the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee."

The university's plans for the center don't call for any initial investment, relying instead on the resources of the Gardner policy institute and the Wilkes Center, as well as several of the University of Utah's departments, J. Willard Marriott Library and Tanner Humanities Center.

The Huntsman Mental Health Institute on campus has been added to that list of affiliated entities after a university trustee, Christena Huntsman Durham, questioned ahead of the board vote why it hadn't been included.

"We have a whole hub around research on Olympic athletes," said Huntsman Durham, the CEO of the Huntsman Mental Health Foundation that supports the mental health institute. She is also the director, executive vice president and vice chair of the Huntsman Family Foundation.

Gochnour said the center "wanted to be more explicit" about the mental health institute's involvement. The proposed purpose of the center now includes "an emphasis on resiliency and well-being of athletes" because of the institute's expertise, she said.

"It will be a pillar of our proposal (and) future center," Gochnour said, adding that "there will be many more areas of research and expertise added over time. We call it a 'research hub,' which in academic parlance, speaks to the broad mission and cross currents of all research."

Lin, who made the presentation about the center to the trustees, told them that having an Olympic center in a place that has hosted a Winter Games is "kind of a no brainer" for the IOC "and they're very supportive. So I don't see any barriers."

He said it will offer "a lot of opportunities" for the U., adding "there's been a surprising lack of U.S. centers."

Read the full story at Deseret News.

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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