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・ Coca-Cola Enterprises
・ Coca-Cola European Partners
・ Coca-Cola FEMSA
・ Coca-Cola Field
・ Coca-Cola formula
・ Coca-Cola Freestyle
・ Coca-Cola HBC AG
・ Coca-Cola headquarters
・ Coca-Cola Içecek
・ Coca-Cola Kid (video game)
・ Coca-Cola Korea
・ Coca-Cola Life
・ Coca-Cola Light Sango
・ Coca-Cola Metbank Pro50 Championship
・ Coca-Cola Museum
Coca-Cola Olympic City
・ Coca-Cola Orange
・ Coca-Cola Park
・ Coca-Cola Park (Allentown)
・ Coca-Cola Place
・ Coca-Cola Raspberry
・ Coca-Cola Refreshing Filmmaker's Award
・ Coca-Cola Scholars Foundation
・ Coca-Cola sign
・ Coca-Cola SoundFest
・ Coca-Cola Telecommunications
・ Coca-Cola Topnotchers
・ Coca-Cola treatment of phytobezoars
・ Coca-Cola Vanilla
・ Coca-Cola West Hiroshima Stadium


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Coca-Cola Olympic City : ウィキペディア英語版
Coca-Cola Olympic City
Coca-Cola Olympic City was an plaza in downtown Atlanta, Georgia, adjacent to the city's Centennial Olympic Park. It was built in concurrence with the 1996 Centennial Olympic Games in Atlanta. Managed by Orlando-based (Baker Leisure Group ), the featured three key areas that displayed Olympic based virtual reality sports attractions.
The first area allowed patrons to play a h-o-r-s-e style game call, "HOOPS" against Grant Hill. The area also allow patron to test their baseball skills by striking out Cecil Fielder in a pitching simulator or hitting a home run against Tom Glavine in a batting simulator.
The second area allowed patrons to ride mountain bikes on simulated competition course, race against Jackie Joyner-Kersee in a dash, perform gymnastics on a balance beam with Mary Lou Retton and race in a simulated wheelchair race as a Paralympian.
The third area included an Olympic themed theater show that took patrons through a 15-minute story about the history of the Olympic Games and the Spirit of the Games. The area also featured actual Olympic artifacts from the International Olympic Museum in Lussanne, Switzerland.
Other areas of Coca-Cola Olympic City included the Champions Challenge Obstacle Course and an open air theater that feature live shows for the Coca-Cola Olympic City Kids.
==Post-Olympics developments==

The area was left vacant after the plaza's closure. In 2002, The Coca-Cola Company donated 9 of its of property at the site to The Marcus Foundation for use as the site of the new Georgia Aquarium, which opened in November 2005. The company also made plans to construct its new World of Coca-Cola on the remainder of the property; the attraction opened in May 2007. The area was christened Pemberton Place after John Pemberton, inventor of Coca-Cola and dedicated to the people of Atlanta.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Coca-Cola Olympic City」の詳細全文を読む



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