(NEXSTAR) – Utah is preparing to host the 2034 Winter Olympic Games, an event officials expect will draw participants from 100 countries. The state is currently in the early stages of a years-long planning process led by the local Olympic organizing committee. Fraser Bullock, the executive chair of the organizing committee, said the group has already raised approximately $250 million in early funding. And they're going to need all they can get: Officials said that staging the Winter Olympics is like hosting multiple Super Bowls every day for two weeks. "The Olympics are the most complicated undertaking in the world," Bullock told Nexstar. "When you think about most businesses, they'll have seven or eight functional areas, marketing, manufacturing. The Olympics have 48." Bullock added that hundreds of millions of additional dollars wouldn't be needed to fund the Olympic Village or competition venues, because those facilities are already secured or completed. Salt Lake City has maintained infrastructure used in 2002, the last time Utah's capital hosted the Winter Games. State officials are also focusing on transportation infrastructure to accommodate the influx of visitors. John Gleason, a spokesperson for Utah Department of Transportation, identified "double -tracking" the FrontRunner train system — adding a second track to double the frequency of the trains — as the "biggest priority." The transit improvements are designed to allow trains to run every 15 minutes. Competition venues will be located across the Wasatch mountain range, front and back. Snow Basin Resort is scheduled to host several marquee events, including the Alpine, Super G and downhill competitions. While some runs at the resort will require refinements, organizers stated that the existing facilities will not require major construction to be ready for the games. The countdown to the 2034 Winter Olympic Games currently stands at over 2,900 days. Infrastructure projects, including the train system expansions, are scheduled to be finished before the cauldron is ignited for the opening ceremonies. All facts in this report were gathered by journalists employed by Nexstar. Artificial intelligence tools were used to reformat from a broadcast script into a news article for our website. This report was edited and fact-checked by Nexstar staff before being published.