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A new world

Movement, innovation and Brazilian flavour – the Rio 2016 Olympic torch is revealed

By Rio 2016

About 12,000 torchbearers will run through 300 cities, passing the flame on in a ‘kiss of torches’

Movement, innovation and Brazilian flavour – the Rio 2016 Olympic torch is revealed

(L-R) Torben Grael, Dilma Rousseff, Carlos Nuzman and Isabel Swan unveil the Rio 2016 Olympic torch (Rio 2016/Alex Ferro)

Movement, innovation and Brazilian flavour: these are the three qualities that form the essence of the Rio 2016 Olympic torch, which was unveiled on Friday (3 July) morning in Brasília. Its design aims to reflect the meeting of the Olympic flame with the human warmth of the Brazilian people, the hosts of the first Olympic Games in South America.

(Click here to visit the Rio 2016 Olympic torch webpage).

The torch was revealed at a special event – attended by Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff, Rio 2016 President Carlos Arthur Nuzman and a host of leading sport figures, including Olympic sailing medallists Torben Grael and Isabel Swan, and volleyball stars Leila and Paulão – at which the 83 Brazilian cities where the torch relay will end each day were also announced. These cities include the capitals of all 26 Brazilian states and Brasília in the Federal District.

The torch relay convoy is expected to visit 500 cities and towns – about 300 of which will host the relay itself while a further 200 will cheer the convoy as it passes by with the flame on display. The route was designed to reach the highest number of people as possible, and Rio 2016 estimates that the torch relay will reach 90 per cent of Brazilians. The complete list of places on the route will be revealed at the beginning of next year.

“We want to show the world the chemistry that we believe will be born when the Olympic Flame meets the warmth of the Brazilian people,” said Nuzman. “Rio de Janeiro is working very hard to host the Games, but these are all of Brazil’s Games and the whole population will take part.”

The Rio 2016 Olympic torch will extend to reveal elements that add Brazilian flavour (Photo: Rio 2016)

 

“The day is coming when we will have the honour of being the first country in South America to host the biggest sporting event on the planet,” said Rousseff. “In 399 days, people from across the world will look at us and see the Olympic flame lit in Rio. We are confident that we are going to meet, to the highest level, this great challenge that we have taken on.”

The journey will begin in May 2016 and will last between 90 and 100 days. There will be about 12,000 torchbearers, each one carrying their torch about 200m, then passing the flame – which will have been lit in Greece – on to the next. The torch will travel 20,000km by road and another 10,000 miles by air over the North and Midwest parts of the country, between the cities of Teresina and Campo Grande, without the flame ever going out.

Eduardo Paes, the mayor of Rio, said: “The Olympic Games are not only about sport. They are part of a process of presenting the host country to the world. We will now have an opportunity to show what a great nation we are.”

The torch’s texture has triangles running the length of its body, alluding to the Olympic values of excellence, friendship and respect, and the floating effect of its different segments refers to the efforts of the athletes. One of its main innovations is the movement of these segments, which open up and expand vertically when the Olympic flame is passed from one torchbearer to another. This is known as “the kiss of the torches”.

Upon expanding, the segments reveal the elements that add the Brazilian flavour – diversity, energy and nature – represented by the sea, mountains, sky and sun, and the colours of the Brazilian flag. Crafted from recycled aluminium and resin with a satin finish, the torch weighs between 1kg and 1.5kg and stands 63.5cm high when closed and 69cm when opened.

“The design of the Rio 2016 torch was inspired by the Olympic Spirit, our country’s nature, and the harmonious diversity and energy of our people,” said Beth Lula, Rio 2016's brand director.

Sao Paulo-based design studio Chelles & Hayashi was selected from a nationwide tender featuring 76 agencies, judged by a multidisciplinary panel formed of 11 expert members. The winning design was refined in collaboration with the Rio 2016 Organising Committee.

Over the next two months, Rio 2016 and the torch relay partners – Coca-Cola, Nissan and Bradesco – will announce public campaigns to select the torchbearers.

The exact date on which the torch leaves Brasília will be confirmed soon, but the relay has a definite finish date: 5 August 2016, the day of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games opening ceremony at the legendary Maracanã Stadium.

Rio 2016 is showing the Olympic torch on Twitter using the hashtag #Rio2016Torch (#TochaRio2016 in Portuguese). Users will receive a personalised image with information on how they can sign up to be involved in the torch relay. Rio 2016 will also take fans behind the scenes of the Olympic torch party at the Brazilian Jockey Club in Rio on Friday night: follow the @Rio2016 account and receive exclusive selfies featuring guests, made with Twitter Mirror.

See below for the list of the 83 cities that will be the final destination of the Olympic flame on each day (except days when technical breaks or special photo events will take place) of the Rio 2016 torch relay:

olympic torch relay map

1 - Brasília
2 - Anápolis
3 - Goiânia
4 - Caldas Novas
5 - Uberlândia
6 - Patos de Minas
7 - Montes Claros
8 - Curvelo
9 - Governador Valadares
10 - Itabira
11 - Belo Horizonte
12 - Juiz de Fora
13 - Cachoeiro de Itapemirim
14 - Vitória
15 - São Mateus
16 - Porto Seguro
17 - Vitória da Conquista
18 - Ilhéus
19 - Valença
20 - Salvador
21 - Senhor do Bonfim
22 - Petrolina
23 - Paulo Afonso
24 - Aracaju
25 - Maceió
26 - Caruaru
27 - Recife
28 - Campina Grande
29 - João Pessoa
30 - Natal
31 - Mossoró
32 - Fortaleza
33 - Sobral
34 - Parnaíba
35 - Teresina
36 - Imperatriz
37 - Palmas
38 - São Luís
39 - Belém
40 - Macapá
41 - Santarém
42 - Boa Vista
43 - Manaus
44 - Rio Branco
45 - Porto Velho
46 - Cuiabá
47 - Campo Grande
48 - Dourados
49 - Presidente Prudente
50 - Londrina
51 - Cascavel
52 - Foz do Iguaçu 
53 - Pato Branco
54 - Passo Fundo
55 - Santa Maria
56 - Pelotas
57 - Porto Alegre
58 - Caxias do Sul
59 - Criciúma
60 - Florianopólis
61 - Blumenau
62 - Joinville
63 - Curitiba
64 - Ponta Grossa
65 - Itapetininga
66 - Bauru
67 - Ribeirão Preto
68 - Franca
69 - Campinas
70 - Osasco
71 - São Bernado
72 - São Paulo
73 - Santos
74 - São José dos Campos
75 - Angra dos Reis
76 - Volta Redonda
77 - Petrópolis
78 - Nova Friburgo
79 - Macaé
80 - Cabo Frio
81 - Niterói
82 - Nova Iguaçu
83 - Rio de Janeiro
 
The Rio 2016 Olympic Torch video is a Rio 2016 Organising Committee production:
Script, Direction and Post-production: Rio 2016 Audiovisual Team - Clara Eyer, Lucas Freitas and Gabriela Cruz.
Soundtrack: A vida do viajante (Hervê Cordovil / Luiz Gonzaga) - original remixed version created by Luiz Antonio Gomes for the torch video launch.