. "1986"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . "38.840853 -104.796288" . . . "\uBBF8\uAD6D \uC62C\uB9BC\uD53D \uD2B8\uB808\uC774\uB2DD \uC13C\uD130(United States Olympic Training Centers, \uC904\uC5EC\uC11C OTCs)\uB294 \uBBF8\uAD6D \uC62C\uB9BC\uD53D\u00B7\uD328\uB7F4\uB9BC\uD53D \uC704\uC6D0\uD68C\uC5D0\uC11C \uB9CC\uB4E0 \uC62C\uB9BC\uD53D\uACFC \uD328\uB7F4\uB9BC\uD53D \uC120\uC218\uB4E4\uC744 \uC704\uD55C \uD6C8\uB828 \uC2DC\uC124\uC774\uB2E4. \uCF5C\uB85C\uB77C\uB3C4\uC8FC\uC758 \uCF5C\uB85C\uB77C\uB3C4\uC2A4\uD504\uB9C1\uC2A4\uC640 \uB274\uC695\uC8FC\uC758 \uB808\uC774\uD06C\uD50C\uB798\uC2DC\uB4DC, \uADF8\uB9AC\uACE0 \uCE98\uB9AC\uD3EC\uB2C8\uC544\uC8FC\uC758 \uCD9C\uB77C\uBE44\uC2A4\uD0C0\uC5D0 \uAC01\uAC01 \uC2DC\uC124\uC774 \uC788\uB2E4. \uBBF8\uAD6D \uC62C\uB9BC\uD53D \uAD50\uC721 \uC13C\uD130(U.S. Olympic Education Center)\uB294 \uBBF8\uC2DC\uAC04\uC8FC \uB9C8\uCF13\uC5D0 \uC788\uB2E4."@ko . . "-104.7962875366211"^^ . . . . "The United States Olympic & Paralympic Training Centers (OPTCs) are two campuses created by the United States Olympic & Paralympic Committee (USOPC) as training facilities for its Olympic and Paralympic athletes. They are located in Colorado Springs, Colorado and Lake Placid, New York. Formerly, the USOPC also had an OPTC in Chula Vista, California, which is now a training site known as the Elite Athlete Training Center. There is a U.S. Olympic Education Center in Marquette, Michigan, and other official U.S. Olympic/Paralympic training sites are located in Oklahoma City and Edmond, Oklahoma; Carson, California; Lakeshore Foundation in Birmingham, Alabama; Charlotte, North Carolina; the Pettit National Ice Center in West Allis, Wisconsin; a USRowing training center in Oakland, California - "@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . "\uBBF8\uAD6D \uC62C\uB9BC\uD53D \uD2B8\uB808\uC774\uB2DD \uC13C\uD130(United States Olympic Training Centers, \uC904\uC5EC\uC11C OTCs)\uB294 \uBBF8\uAD6D \uC62C\uB9BC\uD53D\u00B7\uD328\uB7F4\uB9BC\uD53D \uC704\uC6D0\uD68C\uC5D0\uC11C \uB9CC\uB4E0 \uC62C\uB9BC\uD53D\uACFC \uD328\uB7F4\uB9BC\uD53D \uC120\uC218\uB4E4\uC744 \uC704\uD55C \uD6C8\uB828 \uC2DC\uC124\uC774\uB2E4. \uCF5C\uB85C\uB77C\uB3C4\uC8FC\uC758 \uCF5C\uB85C\uB77C\uB3C4\uC2A4\uD504\uB9C1\uC2A4\uC640 \uB274\uC695\uC8FC\uC758 \uB808\uC774\uD06C\uD50C\uB798\uC2DC\uB4DC, \uADF8\uB9AC\uACE0 \uCE98\uB9AC\uD3EC\uB2C8\uC544\uC8FC\uC758 \uCD9C\uB77C\uBE44\uC2A4\uD0C0\uC5D0 \uAC01\uAC01 \uC2DC\uC124\uC774 \uC788\uB2E4. \uBBF8\uAD6D \uC62C\uB9BC\uD53D \uAD50\uC721 \uC13C\uD130(U.S. Olympic Education Center)\uB294 \uBBF8\uC2DC\uAC04\uC8FC \uB9C8\uCF13\uC5D0 \uC788\uB2E4."@ko . . . "38.84085464477539"^^ . . "Venue"@en . . . . . "\uBBF8\uAD6D \uC62C\uB9BC\uD53D \uD2B8\uB808\uC774\uB2DD \uC13C\uD130"@ko . "Vienna"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "United States Olympic Training Center"@en . "1068385121"^^ . . . . . . . . . . "5096281"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Bassano del Grappa"@en . . . . "7773"^^ . . . . . . "POINT(-104.79628753662 38.840854644775)"^^ . . . . . . . . . . "The United States Olympic & Paralympic Training Centers (OPTCs) are two campuses created by the United States Olympic & Paralympic Committee (USOPC) as training facilities for its Olympic and Paralympic athletes. They are located in Colorado Springs, Colorado and Lake Placid, New York. Formerly, the USOPC also had an OPTC in Chula Vista, California, which is now a training site known as the Elite Athlete Training Center. There is a U.S. Olympic Education Center in Marquette, Michigan, and other official U.S. Olympic/Paralympic training sites are located in Oklahoma City and Edmond, Oklahoma; Carson, California; Lakeshore Foundation in Birmingham, Alabama; Charlotte, North Carolina; the Pettit National Ice Center in West Allis, Wisconsin; a USRowing training center in Oakland, California - previously in Princeton, New Jersey; Huntsville, Texas and the SPIRE Institute and Academy near Geneva, Ohio. Some athletes preparing for the Olympics, Paralympics, and Pan American Games live at one of the OPTCs for a period of months or years, while others visit periodically with their respective national teams for training camps, coaching (especially in sports science and sports psychology), or physical testing. Foreign national teams are also granted use of the USOPTCs. The USOPTCs are all open to the general public for tourism, and they are the only facilities for Olympic training in the world to do so."@en . . . .