Member LoginMember Login - User registration - Setup as front page - Add to favorites - Sitemap Seeing purple: Fans get a new track color and maybe record !

Seeing purple: Fans get a new track color and maybe record

Time:2024-05-07 22:42:21 source:Culture Cross news portal

PARIS (AP) — Fans will be seeing purple at the Olympics when athletes try to set records at this summer’s Paris Games.

In a move away from a more traditional red-brick clay color, an Olympic track is going purple for the first time.

The pieces of vulcanized rubber track were produced at a factory in northern Italy and workers have been laying them down at Stade de France, the national stadium hosting track events.

Workers even appeared to be doing an event of their own. Call it track rolling.

Getting down on their hands and knees, and with their hard hats on, they patiently and meticulously unfurl each strip before hammering a nail in to keep it in position. More than 1,000 such rolls will be used for the track, which requires about one month’s work and 2,800 pots of glue in total.

Three years ago, three world records and 12 Olympic marks were set on the red-brick track in Tokyo.

Related information
  • Tampa Bay Rays reinstate outfielder Josh Lowe from the 10
  • Int'l travel expo kicks off in Macao
  • Beijing confirms recovering tourism during New Year holiday
  • Bernabeu balancing act for Valverde with Copa del Rey final ahead
  • Top clubs urge Brazil's soccer federation to suspend league matches because of flooding
  • Festive holiday bodes well for tourism rebound
  • The Global Security Initiative
  • James Corden reunites with his Gavin & Stacey co
Recommended content
  • Kyren Wilson wins world snooker championship for the first time after beating Jak Jones 18
  • How Columbia University's complex history with the student protest movement echoes into today
  • China unveils Shenzhou
  • Messi scores in return as Miami held by Colorado
  • Human remains were found at a former Hitler base, but decay prevents determining the cause of death
  • Kenya floods: Rescue works underway as death toll nears 100