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Mexico City Olympic Games Official Report ... - LA84 Foundation

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A 9,6 km. du Village Miguel Hidalgo, auquel il était relié par l'Anneau périphérique,<br />

s'élevait le second Village olympique, un ensemble résidentiel entièrement<br />

neuf qu'avait construit un groupe d'architectes dirigés par M.<br />

Martínez Ostos (ci-dessus). Durant les Jeux, une section du Village Coapa fut<br />

réservée à 1 668 juges et officiels, une autre à 1 150 participants à l'Olympiade<br />

culturelle, la troisième enfin à 555 représentants de la presse. Comme le Village<br />

réservé aux athlètes, Coapa formait un complexe autonome doté d'un restaurant,<br />

d'un auditorium, de boutiques, de services médicaux et de salles de répétitions<br />

à l'usage des groupes culturels, tel le Ballet Idla (à droite).<br />

Located six miles from Villa Olímpica by the peripheral freeway—along the<br />

Route of Friendship—is Villa Coapa, an all-new residential complex designed<br />

by an architectural group headed by Martínez Ostros (above). Part of this complex<br />

served as a secondary <strong>Olympic</strong> village. During the <strong>Games</strong>, Villa Coapa accommodated<br />

1,668 judges and officials in one section, 1,150 participants in the<br />

Cultural Olympiad in another, and 555 representatives of the press in a third.<br />

Like Villa Olímpica, the Coapa complex was a self-sufficient unit with a large<br />

dining hall, an auditorium, commercial shops, medical facilities, and rehearsal<br />

halls for cultural groups such as the Ballet Idla (right).<br />

237

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