Innsbruck 1976 Olympic Winter Games, athletic festival held in Innsbruck, Austria, that took place Feb. 4–15, 1976. The Innsbruck Games were the 12th occurrence of the Winter Olympic Games.
The 1976 Games were originally awarded to Denver, but, fearing environmental damage and an increase in costs, the citizens of Colorado voted against staging the event. Denver withdrew as host, and Innsbruck was awarded its second Winter Olympics. Using facilities from the 1964 Winter Games, Innsbruck needed to make only minor renovations to buildings. The Innsbruck Games were again a success.
The singles figure skating competition was reorganized. The compulsory figures, which had accounted for 50 percent of a skater’s total, were reduced to 40 percent, and the skating program was divided into two routines: a short compulsory program of required moves and a longer freestyle program. Dorothy Hamill (U.S.) and John Curry (U.K.) claimed gold under this new system; both were coached by Carlo Fassi, who had taken Peggy Fleming to the title in 1968. Irina Rodnina (U.S.S.R.) repeated as pairs skating champion, though she was teamed with a new partner, Aleksandr Zaytsev. Ice dancing made its Olympic debut, and the highly favoured Soviets Lyudmila Pakomova and Aleksandr Gorshkov won the gold.
In Alpine skiing Franz Klammer (Austria) won the demanding downhill, and Rosi Mittermaier (West Germany), who had never won a major downhill event, captured the women’s gold medal; she also won the slalom and received the silver medal in the giant slalom. Her medal total was matched by Soviet Nordic skier Raisa Smetanina; the two women were the most successful athletes at the Games.