Tickets
Ticket 1906
Ticket 1912
Ticket 1928
Ticket 1932
Olympic Games
 Atlanta
1996
 
USA
 
Ticket Content and Design 1996

Ticket Sales was responsible for the production and distribution of tickets, but decisions on the printed content and security of tickets were made with the assistance of Protocol, Security, Transportation, and Venue Management.

ACOG's Creative Services Department designed all aesthetic elements of the tickets. Because printing on the tickets had to be large enough to be legible to customers, bus and train attendants, and ticket takers, they were printed only in English, the common language of the majority of spectators. Specific security measures involving paper, ink, and the printing process were also incorporated into the design. Three holograms commemorating the Centennial Olympic Games fulfilled both artistic and security requirements.

Each ticket was imprinted with the session's venue name, geographic location of the venue, sport name, a pictogram of the sport, the date and time the session would take place, a unique session code, and seating information. One challenge was to create a common way of describing gates or portals, aisles or sections, rows, and seats at the various venues. Tickets for the arts events included additional descriptions for balcony and orchestra sections. The final format allowed for four character fields with alterable title fields. For venues with fewer than four categories of seat specifications, the excess fields were suppressed during imprinting. Most tickets read "Gate, Section, Row, Seat."
 

 



 


Other details imprinted on each ticket included the price in US dollars and the price level (A, B, C, or D), the session code, a bar code used for redistribution purposes, and the customer account number. Tickets complied with Rule 51 of the Olympic Charter prohibiting advertising. (The disclaimer on the reverse, which included all spectator rules, is shown in Figure 1.)

Ticket Sales produced distinctive, commemorative tickets for both Opening and Closing Ceremonies and souvenir tickets for all other sessions. For box office sales, thermal ticket stock incorporated design features similar to the souvenir stock. Ticket dimensions for the Opening and Closing Ceremonies were 3.75 x 8.5 in (9.53 x 21.6 cm), and souvenir ticket dimensions were 2.5 x 7.5 in (6.35 x 19.05 cm).
The thermal stock dimensions were 2 x 7 in (5.08 x 17.78 cm). Ceremonies tickets were designed differently than other stock because they commanded higher prices and were therefore more vulnerable to counterfeiting efforts.

All four ticket designs corresponded with the Look of the Games motif. Creative Services worked closely with the ticket printer, Weldon, Williams & Lick, to ensure that design ideas were feasible from a printing standpoint. For additional security, the agency was referred to generically as the ticket printer, rather than by its company name.

(Source document:  Official Report 1996, Vol. 1, page 464)

Numbers of visitors:     8.384.300



 
 

 
Olympic Games Tickets:
 
1896   Athens 1900   Paris 1904   St. Louis 1906   Athens 1908   London 1912   Stockholm 1916   cancelled
1920   Antwerp 1924   Paris 1928   Amsterdam 1932   Los Angeles 1936   Berlin 1940   cancelled 1944   cancelled
1948   London 1952   Helsinki 1956   Melbourne 1956   Stockholm 1960   Rome 1964   Tokyo 1968   Mexico City
1972   Munich 1976   Montreal 1980   Moscow 1984   Los Angeles 1988   Seoul 1992   Barcelona 1996   Atlanta
2000   Sydney 2004   Athens 2008   Beijing 2012   London