In the Paralympic Fix-It Shop, Plenty of Fractures but No Blood

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Olympics|In the Paralympic Fix-It Shop, Plenty of Fractures but No Blood

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/09/05/world/olympics/paralympics-wheelchair-repair.html

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Repair technicians at the Paris Games fix everything from bent wheelchair frames to broken sunglasses.

A man in a blue polo shirt stands a prosthetic leg on a table while three other technicians in the same uniform watch. A wheelchair can be seen in the foreground.
At the fix-it shop in the Paralympic Village, repair requests can and do come from every sport. Technicians worked on a prosthetic leg on Sunday.

Elena BergeronJames Hill

Sept. 5, 2024, 5:05 a.m. ET

Spend some time watching the Paralympics and it will soon become obvious from seeing wheelchair athletes bash into each other while playing rugby and basketball that their flattened tires and dented frames might need multiple repairs over their tournaments. But at the Games’ fix-it shop in the Paralympic Village, repair requests can and do come from every sport.

Tire replacements and the spot welding of chairs broken in collisions made up only about 56 percent of the shop’s service requests through the first half of the Games, which continue through Sunday. And many of those chairs were never actually in the shop. Instead, the fixes were made by technicians on-site during rugby matches at Champ de Mars Arena.

“My feeling is that I see wheelchairs the whole time,” said Merle Florestedt, communications director for Ottobock, the Germany company that runs the shop. But the reality is different, he said. “It’s just as much as prostheses. And we also count when somebody brings in sunglasses that are broken.”

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A technician working on a weld.

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Repairs to wheelchairs accounted for 56 percent of the shop’s service requests during the first half of the Games.

The repair shop has refitted prostheses — by traditional methods and via 3-D scanning — sewn loose straps back into place on braces, and even restored the silicone to a man’s prosthetic leg. The facility, 7,750 square feet, is a cross between a mechanic’s garage and a bloodless emergency room, where 164 staffers are available to triage damage to the equipment and assistive devices of more than 4,000 athletes competing in the Games.


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