International Broadcast Centre
The International Broadcast Centre is a temporary hub for broadcasters during major sport events. It is also known as the International Press Center or Main Press Center.
FIFA World Cup
IBC/MPC host cities
- 1958: – Gothenburg
- 1962: – Santiago
- 1966: – London
- 1970: – Mexico City
- 1974: – Munich
- 1978: – Buenos Aires
- 1982: – Madrid
- 1986: – Mexico City
- 1990: – Rome
- 1994: – Dallas and Los Angeles
- 1998: – Paris
- 2002:
- * – Seoul
- * – Yokohama
- 2006: – Munich
- 2010: – Johannesburg
- 2014: – Rio de Janeiro
- 2018: – Moscow
- 2022: – Doha
- 2026: – Dallas
- 2030: – Madrid
- 2034: – Riyadh
2006 edition in Munich
FIFA Women's World Cup
IBC/MPC host cities
- 1991: – Guangzhou
- 1995: – Stockholm
- 1999: – Los Angeles
- 2003: – Los Angeles
- 2007: – Shanghai
- 2011: – Frankfurt
- 2015: – Vancouver
- 2019: – Paris
- 2023: – Sydney
UEFA European Football Championship
120 television and radio channels had broadcast images and reports of the European Football Championship, from the centre to the 190 countries that they serve. Each channel had a space on the 30,000 square meter floor, separated by wooden panels.
IBC/MPC host cities
- 1996: – London
- 2000: – Amsterdam
- 2004: – Lisbon
- 2008: – Vienna
- 2012: – Warsaw
- 2016: – Paris
- 2020: – Vijfhuizen
- 2024: – Leipzig
- 2028: – London
- 2032: – Milan
Olympic Games
The inaugural IBC was created for the Tokyo 1964 Summer Olympics during the inaugural Olympics to be telecast internationally without the need for tapes to be flown overseas, as they had been for the 1960 Olympics four years earlier. These were also the first Olympic Games to have color telecasts, albeit partially.
| Edition | City | Country | Venue or location |
| 1964 Winter | Innsbruck | Innrain campus of the University of Innsbruck | |
| 1964 Summer | Tokyo | Japan|1947FRAefn|There were also smaller press centers in Le Stade de Glace in Grenoble, and at the five other venues in Autrans, Chamrousse, Alpe d'Huez, Saint-Nizier-du-Moucherotte, and Villard-de-Lans.MEX |
Japan|1947FRAefn|There were also smaller press centers in