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India News Updated Jun 4, 2026

India’s Shillong High-Altitude Centre: A Game-Changer for 2028 Olympics

The Union Sports Ministry is establishing a world-class High Altitude Training Centre in Shillong, Meghalaya, at a cost of Rs 150 crores in partnership with NSE Foundation. The facility will accommodate 450 athletes and include a sports science building, heated swimming pool, and upgraded athletic tracks. Altitude training at 1,496 meters will improve athletes’ aerobic capacity, endurance, and recovery, crucial for high-performance sports. The centre aims to enhance India’s preparations for the Asian Games, Commonwealth Games, and the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics.

Union Sports Ministry's world-class high-altitude training centre at Shillong to benefit athletes

New Delhi, June 4

The Union Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports, through the Sports Authority of India, is establishing a world-class High Altitude Training Centre at Shillong, Meghalaya, upgrading the authority's existing Sports Training Centre at the location.

As per the Union Youth Affairs and Sports Ministry, under the leadership of Mansukh Mandaviya, the project is being carried out with an estimated cost of Rs 150 crores, undertaken in partnership with the NSE Foundation under its Corporate Social Responsibility programme, a model of public-private collaboration in the national sporting interest.

The facility will have a capacity for 450 athletes at a time, and the new facilities developed will include a dedicated Sports Science Building, an elite athletes' residential complex, an indoor heated swimming pool, and natural training trails.

The existing eight-lane 400 m athletic track, football field and overall campus structure will also undergo upgradation. This will serve as an asset in national high-performance in sports, aiding and boosting India's preparation for the Asian Games and Commonwealth Games this year and the Los Angeles Olympics in 2028.

The facility will be a specialised facility located at an elevation, where naturally reduced oxygen creates a hypoxic environment. As athletes will stay and train within this environment, it will stimulate red blood cell production, improve oxygen transport and enhance endurance, cardiovascular efficiency and recovery.

The Shillong Centre will combine natural altitude with modern hypoxic facilities to offer all three internationally recognised methods -- Live High-Train High, Live High-Train Low, and Intermittent Hypoxic Training. It will be supported by an integrated ecosystem of sports science, medical and recovery services, personalised nutrition, and elite accommodation.

It will play a big role in the 2028 Olympics preparation, as altitude adaptation has become a decisive performance factor at the highest levels, especially in endurance and high-intensity sports.

* A structured altitude-training cycle can improve:

- Aerobic capacity (VO₂ max): 3-7 per cent

- Endurance performance: 1-3 per cent -- corresponding to the very margins that separate Olympic medal winners.

-Benefits span athletics, swimming, rowing, cycling, boxing and wrestling, through improved endurance, faster recovery and sustained intensity.

The Centre will support physiological adaptation, recovery optimisation, and acclimatisation for high-altitude competition.

It is not the only instance of a high altitude training facility, as some of the leading sporting nations have dedicated altitude facilities as a central part of their preparation systems: -Iten, Kenya (2,400 m) -- training base behind generations of distance-running champions.

-St. Moritz, Switzerland (1,856 m) -- Olympic-standard infrastructure and sports-medicine support.

-Font Romeu, France (1,850 m) -- national altitude centre with comprehensive performance and rehabilitation services.

-Colorado Springs (1,921 m) & Flagstaff, USA (2,100 m) -- established Olympic and Paralympic training facilities.

The Centre at Shillong will bring this established international standard to India. Shillong offers a rare convergence of the conditions required for effective and sustainable altitude training:

-Altitude -- at ~1,496 m, within the optimal moderate-altitude zone, allowing athletes to maintain full training intensity while still gaining physiological adaptation.

-Climate & environment -- ~19°C year-round permits outdoor training in all seasons; clean mountain air aids recovery.

-Terrain -- surrounding hills and natural trails ideal for endurance and cross-country conditioning.

-Strategic location -- the "Scotland of the East," a gateway to the eight North-Eastern States, one of India's fastest-growing talent reservoirs.

-Operational readiness -- built on SAI's existing campus, reducing cost and enabling faster execution.

Overall, these natural advantages and the institutional strength of the Sports Authority of India position Shillong to become India's flagship High Altitude Training Centre and a cornerstone of the nation's long-term Olympic ambitions.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Priya S

Great initiative! But I hope they don't forget about other sports infrastructure across the country. We need grassroots development too, not just elite facilities. Still, this is a big step forward for Indian sports science. Kudos to NSE Foundation for the CSR partnership - that's how progress happens.

James A

As someone who's trained at altitude before, this is fantastic news for Indian athletes. The hypoxic environment at 1,496m will definitely help boost red blood cell counts. Smart move partnering with SAI's existing campus too - saves time and money. Hope they add an oxygen-thinning chamber soon for variable altitudes!

Kavya N

Excellent! The northeastern talent pool is so underutilized. Shillong as a gateway to the eight states can really help discover hidden gems from the region. But I hope they also focus on women athletes' specific needs - proper accommodation, safety, and menstrual health facilities should be priorities too.

Michael C

Comparable to Iten and Font Romeu? That's a high bar, but India has the talent to match. The 450-athlete capacity is impressive. However, we need to ensure this isn't just another white elephant project - regular maintenance, qualified coaches, and sports science staff are crucial. Let's see actual results in 2028.

Rohit P

Finally some forward-thinking from the sports ministry! Mansukh Mandaviya is doing good work. The indoor heated pool and sports science building will be vital for year-round training. But I'm concerned about the timeline - these things often get delayed. Hope they stick to the schedule for the Asian Games preparation.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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